MotoGP: Martin wins from Mir in Austria

Pramac Ducati’s Jorge Martin took his first-ever MotoGP victory, beating Joan Mir in a Styrian Grand Prix that was red-flagged for a fiery incident on lap 2.

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

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.

Joan Mir

The rookie sensation showed experience beyond his years to hold off the challenge of World Champion Joan Mir (Team Suzuki Ecstar) for a maiden premier class win at the Michelin® Grand Prix of Styria. At an event that brought out red flags, Fabio Quartararo (Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP) also stood on the podium, with the Frenchman extending his Championship lead as a result.

Red flag drama

It was a sensational performance from the poleman, who was able to keep his nerve despite a dramatic backdrop to a thrilling race in Spielberg. A pulsating start to the Grand Prix was brought to a premature end on the second lap when the red flag was waved after Dani Pedrosa (Red Bull KTM Factory Racing) highsided and Lorenzo Savadori (Aprilia Racing Team Gresini) crashed into his loose bike. The Italian was sent flying from his RS-GP, which exploded into flames on-track. Thankfully, both riders walked away from the incident relatively unscathed, with Pedrosa able to take his place on the grid upon the restart.

On first go, a blockbuster start saw Francesco Bagnaia (Ducati Lenovo Team) take the holeshot ahead of Martin. There was plenty of aggressive racing too, with Marc Marquez of course at the center of it. From the off the Repsol Honda rider clashed into Aleix Espargaro (Aprilia Racing Team Gresini), with the two having words on the track about it, before Mir and the eight-time Champion collided when the Mallorca was moving back ahead of him. Simmering into a cracker, the red flags brought a premature end to the contest.

They went again

It took some time to clean up the mess, but eventually, we were good to go again, though not before we had even more drama as Maverick Viñales (Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP) was penalized with a pitlane start after stalling his M1 on the warm up lap. Eventually, it was lights out for a 27 lap race and Martin took the holeshot, again having to contend with a factory Ducati, this time Jack Miller (Ducati Lenovo Team). Mir got off the line quickly once more and transitioned from third to second over the course of the opening laps at the expense of the Australian, and began his pursuit of Martin.

Jorge Martin

Just outside the podium places, Quartararo and Johann Zarco (Pramac Racing) were engaging in their own Championship top-two battle. The Yamaha man won this one before setting his sights on the top three, with the Frenchman moving past Miller next. It went from bad to worse for the Aussie, who crashed out of the race with less than 10 laps remaining, handing Quartararo a podium on a plate and all but ending his 2021 MotoGP™ Championship hopes.

At this point, there were no Aprilias on track as Aleix Espargaro joined Savadori, who didn’t make the restart, in the box after retiring early. Miguel Oliveira (Red Bull KTM Factory Racing) was another who failed to take the checkered flag, citing mechanical problems as his reason for returning to the pits early.

L to R: Mir, Martin and Quartararo

The Championship game

Quartararo finished third, his seventh podium in ten outings, but what happened in the battle for fourth could also have a big bearing on the fate of the 2021 Championship. On the final lap, Zarco, second in the title race, sat in P4, but hot on his heels were Brad Binder (Red Bull KTM Factory Racing) and Takaaki Nakagami (LCR Honda Idemitsu). By the time they had all taken the checkered flag, the Frenchman had dropped to P6, conceding two positions and some crucial ground in the title race.

Elsewhere, Alex Rins (Team Suzuki Ecstar) worked his way through the field from a P13 start to finish seventh, while Marc Marquez couldn’t match his bustling start from the first lights out to get into race contention, though he salvaged an eighth-place finish ahead of brother Alex Marquez (LCR Honda Castrol).

It was a hugely disappointing day for Bagnia, who started from P2 on the grid, but got swallowed up on the restart. The Italian was handed a three-second penalty for failing to comply with a long lap penalty and demoted to P11 consequently, meaning Dani Pedrosa finishes in the top 10 in his first race since 2018.

Enea Bastianini (Avintia Esponsorama), Valentino Rossi (Petronas Yamaha SRT), Luca Marini (SKY VR46 Avintia) and Iker Lecuona (Tech 3 KTM Factory Racing) round out the riders among the points.

So to recap, a rookie winner, a first-ever Ducati satellite, a Red Flag, Championship twists and turns. We’ve missed you MotoGP™, and we cannot wait for the Austrian Grand Prix next week.

Race Results

Pos Rider Bike Laps Gap
1 Jorge Martin Ducati 27 0.000s
2 Joan Mir Suzuki 27 1.548
3 Fabio Quartararo Yamaha 27 9.632
4 Brad Binder KTM 27 12.771
5 Takaaki Nakagami Honda 27 12.923
6 Johann Zarco Ducati 27 13.031
7 Alex Rins Suzuki 27 14.839
8 Marc Marquez Honda 27 17.953
9 Alex Marquez Honda 27 19.059
10 Dani Pedrosa KTM 27 19.389
11 Francesco Bagnaia Ducati 27 21.667
12 Enea Bastianini Ducati 27 25.267
13 Valentino Rossi Yamaha 27 26.282
14 Luca Marini Ducati 27 27.492
15 Iker Lecuona KTM 27 31.076
16 Pol Espargaro Honda 27 31.150
17 Cal Crutchlow Yamaha 27 40.408
18 Danilo Petrucci KTM 27 48.114
19 Maverick Viñales Yamaha 27 1’03.149
DNF Jack Miller Ducati 18
DNF Miguel Oliveira KTM 14
DNF Aleix Espargaro Aprilia 4
DNF Lorenzo Savadori Aprilia 0

 

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