Reigning MotoGP Champion Marc
Marquez dominated the Spanish Grand Prix at Jerez, becoming the first repeat
winner of the 2019 campaign. Marquez grabbed the lead off the line and swiftly
escaped from the chasing pack, his job made easier when rookie Fabio Quartararo
– who had succeeded him as MotoGP youngest-ever poleman on Sunday – retired out
of second place with a mechanical issue.
Having locked out the top two in
qualifying, the Petronas Yamaha riders were immediately passed by Marquez off
the line – and looked set to drop behind Andrea Dovizioso too, only for the
Italian to be forced wide exiting Turn 1. This left Marquez leading Franco
Morbidelli and teammate Quartararo, and while the Honda rider towed the
Petronas pair along over the opening few laps, he soon began to make a break. All
of a sudden, the Spaniard was a second and a half clear, with Morbidelli pace
dropping dramatically behind him but the Italian still managing to keep
Quartararo at bay.
The Frenchman finally found a pay
past on lap 11, overtaking Morbidelli as the latter ran wide into the
recently-renamed Pedrosa corner. Unlike Morbidelli, Quartararo could still just
about keep pace with Marquez, which allowed the Frenchman to hold a clear
second place, only for his Yamaha to get stuck in gear on lap 14, ruling the
rookie out of podium contention. By that point, Suzuki rider Alex Rins had
charged through from ninth place, gaining three places right away before
picking off Dovizioso and then Maverick Vinales to come up on Morbidelli. Just
as Quartararo bike expired, Rins found a way past Morbidelli for what was now
second place – but by then Marquez was already almost four seconds clear.
The
win allowed Marquez to move into the lead of the championship, aided by
Dovizioso finishing only fourth, the Ducati rider unable to find a way past
Vinales and deny the Yamaha man his first podium of the season in the closing
laps. Danilo Petrucci took fifth place behind teammate Dovizioso, recording his
best result yet as a Ducati works rider after three consecutive sixth-place
finishes. Valentino Rossi, who had started 13th, spent much of the race stuck
behind Jack Miller, but made speedy progress once he'd cleared the Pramac
Ducati rider and eventually claimed sixth.
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