Michelin identifies cause of Martin's Sepang crash
The tyre supplier has analysed new data to determine the possible cause of Martin's violent accident at Sepang
Jorge Martin, Aprilia Racing
Photo by: Aprilia Racing
Michelin’s MotoGP chief Piero Taramasso says Jorge Martin's crash at the start of the Sepang test was due to a 15C drop in the inside temperature of the rear tyre.
On the opening day of pre-season testing in Malaysia, reigning MotoGP champion Martin was thrown off his Aprilia at Turn 2 as he began an early flying lap of his third run. Crashing to the ground head first, the Spaniard broke his right hand and left foot and had to be transported to a nearby hospital.
He subsequently flew back to Barcelona, where he was operated on by Dr Xavier Mir on Friday morning.
In its initial analysis, Aprilia suggested that the cause of the crash was the rear tyre, to the extent of openly questioning the logistical operations of Michelin, the championship's tyre supplier.
“The data shows that the bike had no problem, and that Jorge did not make any mistakes. I have asked Michelin for the history of the [rear] compound. I wouldn't like to know that it had been stored for 11 months,” Aprilia Racing CEO Massimo Rivola said at the time.
On Thursday, Michelin boss Taramasso traced the route that the tyre in question followed, from when it was manufactured in France in June last year to when it was fitted to Martin's RS-GP.
Piero Taramasso, Michelin, Michelin press scrum
Photo by: Gold and Goose / Motorsport Images
“All this time it has been in a temperature-controlled container. The evidence doesn't indicate that it had any problems,” he said.
On Friday, Taramasso was able to offer more details about what could have happened, having gathered new information from the various sensors located on Martin's tyre. One of the sensors, which prompted Taramasso's appearance, focuses on the temperature of the inner layer of the rubber, a device supplied by McLaren Applied.
According to Taramasso, the reason the rear tyre suddenly lost grip and the Aprilia launched the Spaniard into the air was the low temperature of the inner part of the tyre, not its surface.
“The outside temperature was fine,” he explained. “The inside temperature sensor, on the other hand, shows us that it is about 15 degrees [Celsius] below what we consider normal, which is between 90 and 100 degrees, and that of Marco Bezzecchi's.
“This drop can be due to different reasons. It was less hot than usual, and the bike had returned to the pit after a first crash. Or maybe there was something wrong with the tyre blankets. But we have to keep investigating.”
Photos from Sepang Test - Day 3
Sepang Official Testing - Day 3
Sepang Official Testing - Day 3
Sepang Official Testing - Day 3
Sepang Official Testing - Day 3
Sepang Official Testing - Day 3
Sepang Official Testing - Day 3
Sepang Official Testing - Day 3
Sepang Official Testing - Day 3
Sepang Official Testing - Day 3
Sepang Official Testing - Day 3
Sepang Official Testing - Day 3
Sepang Official Testing - Day 3
Sepang Official Testing - Day 3
Sepang Official Testing - Day 3
Sepang Official Testing - Day 3
Sepang Official Testing - Day 3
Sepang Official Testing - Day 3
Sepang Official Testing - Day 3
Sepang Official Testing - Day 3
Sepang Official Testing - Day 3
Sepang Official Testing - Day 3
Sepang Official Testing - Day 3
Sepang Official Testing - Day 3
Sepang Official Testing - Day 3
Sepang Official Testing - Day 3
Sepang Official Testing - Day 3
Sepang Official Testing - Day 3
Sepang Official Testing - Day 3
Sepang Official Testing - Day 3
Sepang Official Testing - Day 3
Sepang Official Testing - Day 3
Sepang Official Testing - Day 3
Sepang Official Testing - Day 3
Sepang Official Testing - Day 3
Sepang Official Testing - Day 3
Sepang Official Testing - Day 3
Sepang Official Testing - Day 3
Sepang Official Testing - Day 3
Sepang Official Testing - Day 3
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
The helmet drama that hit MotoGP’s 2026 season opener
Senior Honda MotoGP executive exits as HRC restructure continues
The reason MotoGP teams are withholding their 2027 rider announcements
Latest news
Lance Stroll, Max Verstappen and Carlos Sainz allowed to start F1 Australian GP
Kimi Antonelli praises Mercedes "heroes" for vast repairs ahead of Australian GP qualifying
Supercars Melbourne: Broc Feeney takes points lead after Albert Park win
Lando Norris: F1 has gone from “the best cars ever” to "probably the worst”
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