MotoGP News: Zarco wins wet French GP from Marquez
A day Johann Zarco, LCR Honda Castrol and a record-breaking Michelin Grand Prix of France crowd will never forget. For the first time since 1954, 71 years ago, a French MotoGP rider wins on home turf after a wet tire gamble from Zarco saw the #5 beat second place Marc Marquez (Ducati Lenovo Team) by nearly 20 seconds.
The #93 gained important points in the title chase as both Alex Marquez (BK8 Gresini Racing MotoGP) and Francesco Bagnaia (Ducati Lenovo Team) failed to score points on a hugely dramatic Sunday afternoon, which saw Fermin Aldeguer (BK8 Gresini Racing MotoGP) claim a debut MotoGP rostrum.

Once again this year, the Bugatti Circuit in Le Mans served as the backdrop for a major sporting and popular celebration. With a new attendance record set, the MICHELIN Grand Prix de France reaffirmed its status as the most attended event of the season. In true Le Mans fashion, the weather proved capricious throughout the weekend, alternating between chilly mornings, spring sunshine, and heavy rain on Sunday during the race.
Riders had to contend with a surface offering very unpredictable grip. Faced with the challenges of an evolving track, the MICHELIN Power Slick and Power Rain tires demonstrated their full ability to provide performance, consistency, and safety in all conditions.
Tensions were at an all-time high in the lead up to lights out as light rain scattered the Le Mans circuit in the build up. Heading onto the warm-up lap, with everyone on Michelin’s slick tires, it was then abundantly clear that was the wrong tire to be on. Polesitter Quartararo was nearly down at Turn 3 and at the end of the warm-up lap, unsurprisingly, every rider peeled into pit lane and that brought out the red flags due to an excessive number of riders at pit lane exit as we then set ourselves for a quick restart procedure at the French GP. The Grand Prix was also reduced by one lap to 26, with a wet race declared – that meant riders could come in and change their bikes at any moment once we got underway.
Eventually we were lights out and underway and as he was in the Sprint, Bagnaia was down at Turn 3 on Lap 1! Meanwhile, Quartararo led from Marc Marquez and Alex Marquez, Aldeguer was fourth as Bagnaia made it back to pit lane to jump onto his dry weather bike. The Italian was miles behind but having pitted at the end of the sighting lap, over half the grid had double Long Lap penalties to take.
Quartararo, having led by over a second, was the first of the front-runners to dive into the Long Lap loop. Alex Marquez, Aldeguer – who had passed Marc Marquez – and Maverick Viñales (Red Bull KTM Tech3) were the next to come in, but Marc Marquez didn’t. This happened after Bagnaia had been lapped – a disaster for Pecco, who then came in for dry tires. A decision that would prove costly again soon after.
Then, heartbreak. Quartararo was down at the final corner and so was Brad Binder (Red Bull KTM Factory Racing) right behind the Frenchman. Gutting for the 100,000+ crowd, but back on circuit, Pedro Acosta (Red Bull KTM Factory Racing) and Viñales were back in the pit lane to switch back onto wet tires.
Where to look? Marc and Alex were next to come in and that left Aldeguer leading the Grand Prix by over 12 seconds, but now, the rookie was clearly on the wrong tire – and sure enough, the #54 came in on the next lap.
Right, where were we? Well, to the delight of the French faithful, Zarco led the French Grand Prix! The #5 had stuck it out on the wet weather tires and he was leading by seven seconds over Miguel Oliveira (Prima Pramac Yamaha MotoGP), the Portuguese rider had done the same as Zarco, with Marc Marquez and Alex Marquez pressing Oliveira on Lap 9 of 26.
HOW THE FRENCH GP WAS WON
The brothers passed a struggling Oliveira with ease and with 17 laps to go, the gap between leader Zarco and the Marquez duo was 8.5s. That grew to nine seconds with 15 laps to go, then it was 9.3s as Zarco churned out low 1:46s, with Marquez near enough matching the home hero. Alex Marquez was losing touch on the #93, but the #73 had a six second buffer to fourth place Acosta.
With 11 laps to go, Zarco was marching towards an astonishing home Grand Prix victory. The gap had risen to 11.5s, then it was 12.4s as Zarco lapped at least a second quicker than anyone else on track. That trend continued as the advantage rose to over 14 seconds with seven laps as we witnessed two crashes – first Oliveria was down at the final corner, then Alex Marquez crashed at Turn 3. Luckily the former Championship leader remounted, and such were the gaps between a lot of riders, the Spanish GP winner re-joined the Grand Prix in P6. That off promoted Acosta to P3.
Having got back into the race, Alex Marquez was in the gravel again and unfortunately, that was his French GP done. But Gresini’s podium hopes weren’t over because Aldeguer was catching Acosta at a rapid rate of knots. With two laps left, the rookie was right on the back of Acosta and at the front, Zarco’s lead was 19 seconds. The Frenchman simply had to nurse his Honda to the checkered flag.
Aldeguer did get Acosta, but it was all eyes on the #5. One lap left Johann! And he brought it home. The roof was raised at Le Mans because for the first time since 1954, a French MotoGP rider clinched victory on home turf. Unbelievable. What a moment for Zarco, LCR Honda and the record-breaking French GP crowd.
Marc Marquez crossed the line 19.9s away from Zarco to collect a massive 20 points, with Aldeguer backing up his Saturday bronze medal with a debut MotoGP podium. What a weekend for the rookie.

2025 French GP Race Results -26 Laps
Pos | No. | Rider | Nat | Team | Behind |
1 | 5 | Johann Zarco | FRA | Castrol Honda LCR (RC213V) | +0.000s |
2 | 93 | Marc Marquez | SPA | Ducati Lenovo (GP25) | +19.907s |
3 | 54 | Fermin Aldeguer | SPA | BK8 Gresini Ducati (GP24)* | +26.532s |
4 | 37 | Pedro Acosta | SPA | Red Bull KTM (RC16) | +29.631s |
5 | 12 | Maverick Viñales | SPA | Red Bull KTM Tech3 (RC16) | +38.136s |
6 | 30 | Takaaki Nakagami | JPN | Honda Test Rider (RC213V) | +59.527s |
7 | 25 | Raul Fernandez | SPA | Trackhouse Aprilia (RS-GP25) | +70.302s |
8 | 49 | Fabio Di Giannantonio | ITA | Pertamina VR46 Ducati (GP25) | +70.363s |
9 | 32 | Lorenzo Savadori | ITA | Aprilia Factory (RS-GP25) | +25.793s |
10 | 79 | Ai Ogura | JPN | Trackhouse Aprilia (RS-GP25)* | +26.529s |
11 | 10 | Luca Marini | ITA | Honda HRC Castrol (RC213V) | +32.535s |
12 | 42 | Alex Rins | SPA | Monster Yamaha (YZR-M1) | +35.357s |
13 | 23 | Enea Bastianini | ITA | Red Bull KTM Tech3 (RC16) | +1 lap |
14 | 72 | Marco Bezzecchi | ITA | Aprilia Racing (RS-GP25) | +1 lap |
15 | 21 | Franco Morbidelli | ITA | Pertamina VR46 Ducati (GP24) | +1 lap |
16 | 63 | Francesco Bagnaia | ITA | Ducati Lenovo (GP25) | +1 lap |
73 | Alex Marquez | SPA | BK8 Gresini Ducati (GP24) | DNF | |
88 | Miguel Oliveira | POR | Pramac Yamaha (YZR-M1) | DNF | |
33 | Brad Binder | RSA | Red Bull KTM (RC16) | DNF | |
43 | Jack Miller | AUS | Pramac Yamaha (YZR-M1) | DNF | |
20 | Fabio Quartararo | FRA | Monster Yamaha (YZR-M1) | DNF | |
36 | Joan Mir | SPA | Honda HRC Castrol (RC213V) | DNF |
*Rookie