Skip to main content

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.

Recommended for you

Rossi, O'Ward, and Grosjean cars destroyed in huge Indy 500 practice crash

IndyCar
110th Running of the Indianapolis 500
Rossi, O'Ward, and Grosjean cars destroyed in huge Indy 500 practice crash

Josef Newgarden leads abbreviated Indy 500 practice marred by storms, major wreck

IndyCar
110th Running of the Indianapolis 500
Josef Newgarden leads abbreviated Indy 500 practice marred by storms, major wreck

Winners and losers from a strange NASCAR All-Star Race at Dover

NASCAR Cup
All-Star Race
Winners and losers from a strange NASCAR All-Star Race at Dover

Lando Norris opens up on McLaren award that transformed his racing career

Formula 1
Canadian GP
Lando Norris opens up on McLaren award that transformed his racing career

Pedro Acosta does not believe a MotoGP riders' association is viable: "We are too egocentric"

MotoGP
Barcelona Official Testing
Pedro Acosta does not believe a MotoGP riders' association is viable: "We are too egocentric"

F1 Academy gets Disney merchandise collection for Canadian Grand Prix weekend

F1 Academy
Montreal
F1 Academy gets Disney merchandise collection for Canadian Grand Prix weekend

Rob Smedley slams slow F1 pitwall responses as "unacceptable"

Formula 1
Canadian GP
Rob Smedley slams slow F1 pitwall responses as "unacceptable"

Pedro Acosta fastest as rain curtails Barcelona MotoGP test

MotoGP
Barcelona Official Testing
Pedro Acosta fastest as rain curtails Barcelona MotoGP test

Francesco Bagnaia just trying to "survive" on Sundays as tyre troubles continue

A fundamental problem with this year's Ducati is causing major tyre wear issues in grands prix, says Bagnaia

Francesco Bagnaia, Ducati Team, Alex Marquez, Gresini Racing, Marc Marquez, Ducati Team

Francesco Bagnaia, Ducati Team, Alex Marquez, Gresini Racing, Marc Marquez, Ducati Team

Photo by: David Buono / Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

Francesco Bagnaia identified tyre wear on Sundays as a recurring problem area as he tries to inject some momentum into his 2026 MotoGP campaign. 

The Italian, who is trying to bounce back from a nightmare season in 2025, has had limited success in that ambition so far this season. He did have an encouraging outing in the USA last weekend, qualifying fourth-fastest and coming within half a lap of winning the sprint race. But tyre wear saw him fade dramatically in the grand prix, which he finished 10th.

Bagnaia, who was running fourth with just three laps to go, said that going into conservative mode early on hadn't helped him save the tyre.

"Even [though] I wasn't pushing, I finished completely out of rear tyre," said the double world champion. "After eight laps, I started to feel a big drop.

"The last two laps, I was completely on the limit. I was risking to crash, just leaning on the right side. It was very difficult."

He added that despite starting higher up the grid than in Thailand and Brazil, the pattern on Sunday had been the same.

"In all three races from the start of the season, I struggled a lot in the Sunday race. I cannot push like I want. I just need to survive.

"Even [just] surviving, I finished the rear tyre completely. We need to understand what to do."

Bagnaia, who was enjoying victory hot dogs at this race a year ago, suggested that a lack of front-end turning capability was causing the GP26 to overuse its rear tyre. 

"Right now, I think that our bike needs to turn with the rear because the front is pushing up. We cannot stop while the bike is pushing quite hard. I need to turn with the rear and I destroy it."

Fabio Di Giannantonio, VR46 Racing Team

Fabio Di Giannantonio, VR46 Racing Team

Photo by: Gold and Goose Photography / LAT Images / via Getty Images

Fellow Ducati rider Fabio Di Giannantonio, who finished fourth on Sunday after starting from pole position, echoed Bagnaia's sentiments. 

"I think we need to improve our front," said the Roman. "We need to be able to brake harder and bring more speed into the corner with the front. That is the issue that we have at the moment, that we're all on the rear. And once the rear is gone, we cannot really express our speed.

"We use the rear a lot. When you have a new tyre, the bike is really good and we can do whatever we want. But then when the rear tyres start to drop a little, you don't have the front to support the drop of the rear tyre, so for us it gets more difficult."

Di Giannantonio started from pole in both of the last two races, but has not been able to convert that to a victory on either occasion.

Previous article Marco Bezzecchi ‘won’t consider himself title contender’ until sprint errors cut out
Next article Why Toprak Razgatlioglu isn’t satisfied with his MotoGP breakthrough

Top Comments

Latest news