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

How Fabio Di Giannantonio struck a nerve with Pedro Acosta: 'Nobody passes me while looking at me' 

MotoGP
French GP
How Fabio Di Giannantonio struck a nerve with Pedro Acosta: 'Nobody passes me while looking at me' 

Can F1 save its races in Bahrain and Jeddah? Here’s how every option could play out

Formula 1
Can F1 save its races in Bahrain and Jeddah? Here’s how every option could play out

How winding back the clock helped Fabio Quartararo salvage a good home GP

MotoGP
French GP
How winding back the clock helped Fabio Quartararo salvage a good home GP

IndyCar, IndyCar Officiating announce changes following Rossi’s Indy road course incident

IndyCar
Indianapolis Road Course
IndyCar, IndyCar Officiating announce changes following Rossi’s Indy road course incident

"It's a business" – Lando Norris explains why drivers don't have more say in F1's rules

Formula 1
Miami GP
"It's a business" – Lando Norris explains why drivers don't have more say in F1's rules

Why WEC is in a great place heading into the Le Mans 24 Hours

Feature
WEC
Feature
Spa
Why WEC is in a great place heading into the Le Mans 24 Hours

As Marquez sinks and Martin surges, Bezzecchi knows exactly who to beat for the MotoGP title

Feature
MotoGP
Feature
French GP
As Marquez sinks and Martin surges, Bezzecchi knows exactly who to beat for the MotoGP title

Francesco Bagnaia: "Admirable" Jorge Martin is repeating 2024 title-winning strategy

MotoGP
French GP
Francesco Bagnaia: "Admirable" Jorge Martin is repeating 2024 title-winning strategy
Breaking news

Quartararo: Poor Mir qualifying won’t dictate race strategy

French Grand Prix poleman Fabio Quartararo insists his strategy for Sunday's Le Mans race won't change owing to MotoGP title rival Joan Mir's season-worst qualifying result.

Petronas SRT's Quartararo and Suzuki's Mir are split by eight points at the head of the MotoGP standings, with Quartararo blitzing the field for a home pole at Le Mans on Sunday.

Mir failed to make it out of Q1 and will line up in 14th, offering a prime opportunity for Quartararo to extend his points lead on Sunday.

Quartararo is flanked by the fast-starting Ducatis of Jack Miller and Danilo Petrucci on the front row, but is confident his pace in the first sector hasn't already resigned him to a losing battle with the Desmosedicis.

He also insists he is "not thinking about Mir" right now and how that could force him into banking points instead of going for the win depending on where the Suzuki rider ends up.

"Well, we know that they [the Ducatis] start really well, but we can manage to get good starts," Quartararo said when asked by Motorsport.com how Mir's qualifying and starting alongside Ducatis would affect his approach to the race.

"So, I'm not really thinking about it. [I will] try to do my best. The first sector I'm actually good, so we'll do the best as possible to make a good first sector in the first lap. But we'll see.

"But, honestly, I'm not thinking about Mir. I just want to enjoy. I think we have great pace to fight for the podium and for the victory. So, [I will] just try to be calm and do our best.

"So, this is what I'm thinking for tomorrow more than the championship."

Suzuki riders have typically struggled in qualifying this year, with neither Mir nor teammate Alex Rins making it to the front row in 2020.

The colder temperatures at Le Mans this weekend have exacerbated the Suzuki's inability to extract the maximum from soft rubber in time attack mode, with Mir noting he's losing half a second in the first sector alone.

"Looks like we are coming, we are improving but not enough," he said. "I think we have margin to improve for tomorrow, but the reality is we'll start really far back.

"We are working to improve in that area, the temperature with the front tyres is something for the moment we struggle with.

"I lose a lot of time in the first sector, because the first left corner I'm not able to stop the bike, I don't have any feedback and if I try anymore [to push] I just lose the front.

"This is really difficult, I lose half a second in the first sector and this is a lot of time. But the good news is, in the other sectors we are fast.

"So, this means we can be fast but we need to find a solution for the first sector. If we improve three tenths, or two tenths in that sector, tomorrow we can make a really good race."

Previous article Morbidelli fears "nightmare" race as Yamaha "useless" in pack
Next article Oliveira slams “childish” Bagnaia over Le Mans Q2 MotoGP spat

Top Comments

Latest news