Subscribe

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.

Motorsport prime

Discover premium content
Subscribe

Edition

Global

Misano MotoGP: Morbidelli bags maiden win, Quartararo retires

Franco Morbidelli dominated a dramatic San Marino Grand Prix to claim his first MotoGP victory, while Petronas Yamaha teammate Fabio Quartararo crashed twice and retired from the race.

Podium: race winner Franco Morbidelli, Petronas Yamaha SRT, second place Francesco Bagnaia, Pramac Racing, third place , third place Joan Mir, Team Suzuki MotoGP

Photo by: Gold and Goose / Motorsport Images

Morbidelli nailed his launch from second on the grid to lead Valentino Rossi on the factory team Yamaha into the first corner, while poleman Maverick Vinales dropped to third and Quartararo fifth.

Rossi tried to take the lead from his protege at the Quercia left-hander, but Morbidelli slammed the door in his face, while Jack Miller demoted Vinales to fouth two corners later.

Morbidelli and Rossi opened up a half-a-second gap to Miller, with Quartararo eventually finding a way through on Vinales with a hard move at the Carro hairpin on lap seven.

As he tried to get close the gap to the front Quartararo crashed at the Rio corner at Turn 4.

He rejoined down in 20th, and after a trip to the pits on lap 20, Quartararo crashed for a second time on a cold front tyre at Turn 6 to cap off a miserable Sunday.

By lap nine, Morbidelli started to eke away from Rossi, with his lead up to over a second by the 14th tour.

Morbidelli continued to ease away from Rossi, his lead standing at two seconds by lap 18.

Miller’s run in third faded as Alex Rins on the Suzuki found a way through on lap 14, with Miller’s injured Pramac teammate Francesco Bagnaia in his first race since the Andalusian GP moving ahead on the same tour.

Bagnaia’s charge continued with Rins on lap 20, before he scythed through on his mentor Rossi at the fast Curvove Turn 11 right on lap 21.

The battle for second closed up in the final laps, with Bagnaia, Rossi, Rins and Joan Mir on the sister Suzuki all gunning for the podium.

Rossi ran a defensive line at Turn 2 to keep Rins at bay lap after lap before Mir demoted his teammate at the start of the final lap after Rins made a mistake at the penultimate corner.

Mir then went after Rossi, bravely carving his way up the inside at Turn 10 to grab third, with the Yamaha rider unable to find a way back through.

Morbidelli eased across the line having backed off his pace in the last laps to become the fourth new winner of 2020, while Bagnaia secured his maiden MotoGP podium in second.

Mir completed the rostrum, denying home hero Rossi his 200th podium finish.

Rins completed the top five ahead of Vinales, whose gamble to run the hard rear tyre appeared to backfire as he quickly faded from the podium battle and ended up sixth.

Andrea Dovizioso was seventh on the factory Ducati and takes a six-point lead in the standings after Quartararo’s crashes, with Takaaki Nakagami top Honda rider in eighth on the LCR bike ahead of Miller and KTM’s Pol Espargaro.

Nakagami was subsequently docked a place for exceeding track limits, promoting Miller to eighth place.

Miguel Oliveira worked his way up to 11th after a poor start on his Tech 3 KTM ahead of works rival Brad Binder, with Aprilia’s Aleix Espargaro, Iker Lecuona (Tech 3) and Avintia’s Johann Zarco taking the final points.

Lecuona was handed a long-lap penalty for failing to start from pitlane after stalling his KTM on the grid on the warm-up lap.

Tito Rabat (Avintia) crashed out late on, while Aprilia’s Bradley Smith was 19th after an early tumble.

San Marino GP - Race results:

Cla Rider Bike Gap
1 Italy Franco Morbidelli Yamaha  
2 Italy Francesco Bagnaia Ducati 2.217
3 Spain Joan Mir Suzuki 2.290
4 Italy Valentino Rossi Yamaha 2.643
5 Spain Alex Rins Suzuki 4.044
6 Spain Maverick Viñales Yamaha 5.383
7 Italy Andrea Dovizioso Ducati 10.358
8 Australia Jack Miller Ducati 11.155
9 Japan Takaaki Nakagami Honda 10.839
10 Spain Pol Espargaro KTM 12.030
11 Portugal Miguel Oliveira KTM 12.376
12 South Africa Brad Binder KTM 12.405
13 Spain Aleix Espargaro Aprilia 15.142
14 Spain Iker Lecuona KTM 19.914
15 France Johann Zarco Ducati 20.152
16 Italy Danilo Petrucci Ducati 22.094
17 Spain Alex Marquez Honda 22.473
18 Germany Stefan Bradl Honda 37.856
19 United Kingdom Bradley Smith Aprilia 1'18.831
  Spain Tito Rabat Ducati 5 Laps
  France Fabio Quartararo Yamaha 9 Laps

Be part of Motorsport community

Join the conversation
Previous article Crutchlow still wants Aprilia seat amid retirement suggestions
Next article Morbidelli "not aiming" at title bid after maiden MotoGP win

Top Comments

There are no comments at the moment. Would you like to write one?

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.

Motorsport prime

Discover premium content
Subscribe

Edition

Global