Marc Marquez wins Germany Sprint Race

MotoGP News: Marquez schools Bezzecchi on last lap of Sprint

For 14.5 of 15 laps, Marc Marquez played with Marco Bezzecchi, and then with 1/2 lap to go in the rain, Marquez gave Bezzecchi a riding lesson he won’t soon forget.

Marc Marquez’s (Ducati Lenovo Team) final lap pass on Marco Bezzecchi (Aprilia Racing) saw the championship leader pocket another gold medal in a blistering wet weather Liqui Moly Grand Prix of Germany Tissot Sprint at the Sachsenring.

And joining the Ducati and Aprilia stars on the podium was Fabio Quartararo as Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP’s lead rider claims a Sprint rostrum for the first time since 2023.

MARC MARQUEZ WIDE, BEZZECCHI LEADS

Marc Marquez got a phenomenal launch from pole but he was wide at Turn 1. That cost the polesitter a handful of positions as he dropped to P5 initially, before that was then P6 as Fabio Di Giannantonio (Pertamina Enduro VR46 Racing Team) carved his way through at Turn 8.

Meanwhile, your Sprint leader was Bezzecchi, the Italian had compatriot Morbidelli 0.6s behind him, as Quartararo enjoyed his opening two laps – the Frenchman was up to P3 from seventh on the grid. However, his countryman was going the opposite way. Johann Zarco (CASTROL Honda LCR) dropped to P10; was the medium rear wet Michelin tyre choice a factor?

Morbidelli was then down at Turn 8 on Lap 3, and it was a fast one. That promoted Quartararo to P2 and on the next two laps, El Diablo was the quickest rider on track. The gap between Bezzecchi and Quartararo was 1.5s on Lap 5 of 15, as Marc Marquez made a move on Di Giannantonio stick – and Pedro Acosta (Red Bull KTM Factory Racing) followed the #93 through soon after as the Spaniards now sat P3 and P4.

THE COMEBACK BEGINS

Once he got through on Di Giannantonio, Marc Marquez was now the quickest rider on track. The gap to Bezzecchi was 2.4s, and the gap to Quartararo was 1.2s at the start of Lap 7.

Acosta’s podium hopes ended on Lap 8 after he ran into the gravel at Turn 8, as we then watched Marquez pass Quartararo for P2 at Turn 1 at the beginning of Lap 9. At this stage, Bezzecchi had 1.6s in hand. That dropped to 1.3s at the start of Lap 10, but Bezzecchi was responding well to the championship leader’s charge.

0.5s was shaved off Bezzecchi’s lead by Marquez though as they entered the final four laps, and the gap was now down to under a second. Big pressure was building on the shoulders of Bezzecchi, and with three to go, there was only 0.5s between the top two.

Two to go. Now, there was nothing in it. Marquez was right on the tailpipes of the Aprilia star, as we strapped in for a gold medal battle to the chequered flag.

Last lap time. Marquez made a move at Turn 1 that looked like it wouldn’t stick, but he hung it around the outside and earned the inside line for Turn 2 to pinch P1 from Bezzecchi. Could the latter respond? For the battle, Bezzecchi and Aprilia, unfortunately not.

Marquez was too strong through the left-handers, and it was the #93 who clinched victory ahead of the impressive Bezzecchi and Quartararo, who did enough to narrowly hold off Di Giannantonio in the latter stages to pick up his first Sprint podium since the 2023 Dutch GP.

SPRINT POINTS SCORERS

The aforementioned Di Giannantonio was P4, 0.3s away from the bronze medal position, as Jack Miller (Prima Pramac Yamaha MotoGP) rounded out the top five on a positive afternoon for Yamaha. Brad Binder (Red Bull KTM Factory Racing) kept Zarco and Alex Marquez (BK8 Gresini Racing MotoGP) behind him, as the latter loses 10 points in the title chase while nursing his hand fracture. The last point went to Acosta, the #37 recovering well after his off.

COMING UP: GRAND PRIX SUNDAY

So for the 10th time in 11 weekends, gold medal honors go to Marc Marquez. Can he be stopped at the Sachsenring on Sunday?

Germany Sprint Race Results

Pos No. Rider Nat Team Behind Gap
1 93 Marc Marquez SPA Ducati Lenovo (GP25) +0.000s +0.000s
2 72 Marco Bezzecchi ITA Aprilia Racing (RS-GP25) +0.938s 0.938
3 20 Fabio Quartararo FRA Monster Yamaha (YZR-M1) +4.361s 3.423
4 49 Fabio Di Giannantonio ITA Pertamina VR46 Ducati (GP25) +4.683s 0.322
5 43 Jack Miller AUS Pramac Yamaha (YZR-M1) +9.405s 4.722
6 33 Brad Binder RSA Red Bull KTM (RC16) +11.720s 2.315
7 5 Johann Zarco FRA Castrol Honda LCR (RC213V) +12.090s 0.370
8 73 Alex Marquez SPA BK8 Gresini Ducati (GP24) +12.347s 0.257
9 37 Pedro Acosta SPA Red Bull KTM (RC16) +17.236s 4.889
10 54 Fermin Aldeguer SPA BK8 Gresini Ducati (GP24)* +18.728s 1.492
11 Miguel Oliveira POR Pramac Yamaha (YZR-M1) +19.486s
12 Francesco Bagnaia ITA Ducati Lenovo (GP25) +20.339s
13 Raul Fernandez SPA Trackhouse Aprilia (RS-GP25) +21.978s
14 Joan Mir SPA Honda HRC Castrol (RC213V) +23.077s
15 Alex Rins SPA Monster Yamaha (YZR-M1) +23.575s
16 Luca Marini ITA Honda HRC Castrol (RC213V) +29.220s
17 Ai Ogura JPN Trackhouse Aprilia (RS-GP25)* +31.433s
18 Lorenzo Savadori ITA Aprilia Factory (RS-GP25) +50.698s
Franco Morbidelli ITA Pertamina VR46 Ducati (GP24) DNF