Francesco Bagnaia "struggling a lot" after disappointing MotoGP Italian GP sprint
Bagnaia lost more ground in the fight for the MotoGP title as he finished a disappointing third in the Mugello sprint
Francesco Bagnaia, Ducati Team, Alex Marquez, Gresini Racing, Marc Marquez, Ducati Team
Photo by: Tiziana Fabi / AFP via Getty Images
A downbeat Francesco Bagnaia said it was the “same as always” as he again struggled with the front end of his bike during the Italian Grand Prix sprint race at Mugello.
The factory Ducati rider started the sprint in second, but ultimately finished third behind team-mate and race winner Marc Marquez, as well as runner-up Alex Marquez.
This was despite him briefly leading in front of his home crowd at one point and Bagnaia is now 98 points behind championship leader Marc Marquez.
“Same as always,” said double world champion Bagnaia. “I started well, then they overtook me. I get stuck behind, then I cannot close the gap, and I finish there where I am.
“It’s like this from the start of the season. And honestly, I’m struggling a lot to do what I know I can do. I know that I can enter faster, I know I can do something that I’ve seen that others are doing.
“But I can’t do it. I’m unable, and I’m struggling a lot to put speed inside the corners.”
Francesco Bagnaia, Ducati Team
Photo by: Gold and Goose Photography / LAT Images / via Getty Images
Bagnaia is yet to win a sprint race in 2025 with his only victory altogether coming at the Americas Grand Prix in Austin on 30 March.
That’s a stark contrast to last year as he won 11 grands prix, including Mugello where he also took the sprint win, and Bagnaia explained that he is still having issues with the front of his Ducati.
“The front is moving a lot, it’s locking a lot, it’s understeering a lot,” added the 2024 championship runner-up.
“And it’s a shame, because I was the only one that slowed the pace compared to last year. I was four, five tenths slower than last year when I won the sprint.
“Qualifying was very good. I was happy. I just did one mistake, and one little mistake cost me a bit.
“Then I started the race, and I was feeling good. I think, ‘okay, I can fight’. But then after three or four laps, I finished the front tyre, and it was very tough then.”
Looking ahead to Sunday’s grand prix, Bagnaia said: “For tomorrow, let’s see. It depends on the condition - looks will be a bit colder.
“I think that with double the distance, my problems with the front will be worse. It’s the ninth GP, and more or less, the problem is always the same. So, we need to understand something in a different way.”
Photos from Italian GP - Qualifying & Sprint
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
2025 Italian GP - Saturday
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
Aprilia 'feels like home' despite contract standoff, says Jorge Martin
Marc Marquez only cares about MotoGP title and not records following Czech GP win
Jorge Martin searching for “confidence” after long-awaited MotoGP return
Why Francesco Bagnaia is "not that worried" after another miserable MotoGP race
Francesco Bagnaia says “I just decided” on 2027 MotoGP plans amid links to Aprilia move
Aprilia steps up efforts to lure Francesco Bagnaia for 2027 MotoGP project
Davide Tardozzi: Ducati 'slapped in the face' by Aprilia, but true pecking order yet to emerge
Pedro Acosta "didn't expect" sprint penalty for Marc Marquez
Marc Marquez lacking same strength as last year after “no joke” Indonesia injury
Latest news
Charles Leclerc defends F1 racing in 2026: It "doesn't feel so artificial"
Just like Jim Clark - Kimi Antonelli keeps his promise with iconic thumbs-up celebration
The grim start warning Formula 1 seems to have missed
How Scotland ended the WRC’s seven-year GB hiatus
Feature
Where MotoGP’s penalty system still lacks clarity
Five things we learned at the MotoGP Thai GP
Five MotoGP riders who need a big 2026 season
What we learned from the Thailand MotoGP test
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