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

Styrian MotoGP: Jorge Martin scores maiden win after red flag

Pramac Ducati’s Jorge Martin took his maiden MotoGP victory after resisting immense pressure from Joan Mir in a Styrian Grand Prix that was red-flagged for a fiery incident early on.

Watch: MotoGP: Martin wins Styrian GP after dramatic fire

Martin is still recovering from a wrist injury he suffered in the heavy crash in Portugal which ruled him out for four races, but – much like he did in the Doha GP – absorbed all the pressure mounted on him by reigning world champion Mir to claim a sensational first win for himself and the team.

The race was red-flagged after a fiery incident between Dani Pedrosa and Aprilia’s Lorenzo Savadori, who struck unsighted the stricken KTM of Pedrosa at Turn 3 after the wildcard had fallen.

Read Also:

After a lengthy clean-up operation, the race was restarted across 27 laps at 2:40pm with the grid order based on the original start.

Having led the opening two laps at the first start, Ducati’s Francesco Bagnaia had a nightmare start to the second race, dropping way down the order on the opening lap.

Teammate Jack Miller shot into the lead at the second start having fluffed it on his first attempt, with poleman Martin slotting behind having made a brief assault on first.

Martin eventually found a way through on Miller at Turn 2 on the fourth lap, with Mir guiding his Suzuki into second soon after.

Championship leader Fabio Quartararo climbed up to third on the factory Yamaha at Turn 3 on lap seven, with that battle raging on through Turns 4 and 6 – Quartararo getting the better of the Ducati rider.

But this allowed Martin and Mir at the front of the field to pull away by over a second, with the leading duo running line astern for much of the race.

By lap 19, Martin began to stretch his legs and put eight tenths between himself and Mir, who would make a mistake under braking for Turn 3 three tours later.

Martin’s lead extended to 1.2s as a result, and as the Pramac rider continued to hammer out a strong pace Mir waved the white flag on his charge.

Coming under no threat over the final laps, Martin took the chequered flag by 1.5s from Mir, while Quartararo completed the podium to extend his championship lead.

Crash at turn 2

Crash at turn 2

Photo by: Gold and Goose / Motorsport Images

Quartararo’s afternoon was made easier when Miller crashed at Turn 7 on lap 18, dealing his championship hopes a potentially fatal blow as he slips 72 points off the lead.

A stunning charge from 16th culminated in KTM’s Brad Binder finishing fourth after picking off LCR’s Takaaki Nakagami and Pramac’s Johann Zarco late on.

Alex Rins was seventh on the second Suzuki while Marc Marquez recovered to eighth after running off track at the first corner in the opening stages.

The Honda rider had two first-corner collisions with Aprilia’s Aleix Espargaro on both starts, the former leaving Espargaro utterly furious.

The Aprilia rider retired early in the restart, with Marquez heading LCR Honda-mounted brother Alex in eighth and ninth.

After his scary crash, Pedrosa took the restart on his spare KTM and was promoted to 10th in his first race since Valencia 2018 when Ducati’s Bagnaia was given a three-second penalty for failing to comply with the long lap penalty.

He dropped to 11th ahead of Avintia’s Enea Bastianini, Petronas SRT’s Valentino Rossi, his half-brother Luca Marini (Avintia) and Tech 3’s Iker Lecuona.

Pol Espargaro ended up without points on his Honda after a long lap penalty, with SRT stand-in Cal Crutchlow and Tech 3’s Danilo Petrucci 17th and 18th.

Maverick Vinales was last on the other factory Yamaha after he was forced to start from pitlane when he stalled his bike on the grid for the restart.

Copping a long lap penalty for track limits, it’s the second race in three where Vinales has finished last.

KTM’s Miguel Oliveira retired with a mechanical issue, while Savadori did not take the restart.

Quartararo’s championship lead now extends to 40 points from Zarco, while Mir has closed in slightly to 51 behind.

Race results:

Cla # Rider Bike Gap
1 89 Spain Jorge Martin Ducati  
2 36 Spain Joan Mir Suzuki 1.548
3 20 France Fabio Quartararo Yamaha 9.632
4 33 South Africa Brad Binder KTM 12.771
5 30 Japan Takaaki Nakagami Honda 12.923
6 5 France Johann Zarco Ducati 13.031
7 42 Spain Alex Rins Suzuki 14.839
8 93 Spain Marc Marquez Honda 17.953
9 73 Spain Alex Marquez Honda 19.059
10 26 Spain Dani Pedrosa KTM 19.389
11 63 Italy Francesco Bagnaia Ducati 21.667
12 23 Italy Enea Bastianini Ducati 25.267
13 46 Italy Valentino Rossi Yamaha 26.282
14 10 Italy Luca Marini Ducati 27.492
15 27 Spain Iker Lecuona KTM 31.076
16 44 Spain Pol Espargaro Honda 31.150
17 35 United Kingdom Cal Crutchlow Yamaha 40.408
18 9 Italy Danilo Petrucci KTM 48.114
19 12 Spain Maverick Viñales Yamaha 1'03.149
  43 Australia Jack Miller Ducati  
  88 Portugal Miguel Oliveira KTM  
  41 Spain Aleix Espargaro Aprilia  
  32 Italy Lorenzo Savadori Aprilia  

 

 

Be part of Motorsport community

Join the conversation
Previous article Styrian MotoGP: Race stopped after fiery crash involving Pedrosa
Next article Espargaro angry with MotoGP stewards after Marquez Styria clash

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