This article originally appeared on Late-Braking MotoGP.
The 2020 MotoGP season got off with a bang, as the brutally hot conditions in southern Spain took a toll on all three classes. The most dramatic event today was Marc Marquez crashing heavily toward the end of the premier class race, after recovering from a costly early moment to challenge for the win. Yamaha took three of the top five spots, despite Valentino Rossi’s retirement on Lap 19; Ducati claimed the other two. With Marquez showing a zero, MotoGP 2020 may provide fans with some real drama for the first time in five years.
One must concede that Marquez, despite being faster than everyone else out there, was a bit rusty. Coming off an 8-month layoff, and with riders having little real practice time under their belts, this race was unlikely to be a work of art. Two riders failed to start, five failed to finish, and several others went walkabout and re-entered. According to the announcers, the heat was worse than Sepang, worse than Buriram. This is what happens when you schedule stuff outdoors in southern Spain in July.
Practice and Qualifying
I keep arguing with myself about the utility of Fridays at Round Ones, about trying to glean anything from the timesheets. Not too much there for me. The same cannot be said about the results of the combined FP1-FP3 practices that separate the goats from the lambs re: having to slog through the frying pan of Q1 just to get thrust immediately into the fire of Q2. On Saturday FP3 ended with Andrea Dovizioso on the inside looking out from P10 at the likes of Pol Espargaro, Alex Rins, Danilo Petrucci, Johann Zarco, Miguel Oliveira and, not for the last time, Alex Marquez.
In addition to the usual suspects, the lambs included Jack Miller and Joan Mir, both looking dangerous, Cal Crutchlow lame-ducking the LCR Honda, suddenly quick SRT TechTrois Yamaha heartthrob Franco Morbidelli and young Pecco Bagnaia, who, having crawled in 2019, appears to be walking on the Pramac Ducati in 2020. Rossi making it straight to Q2 is a relief for him and his team. Marc Marquez, who led Friday, was lurking, keeping his powder dry in P4, looking like he was ready to assert himself in qualifying. Fabio set a new track record on Saturday morning. But not having fans in the stands made it feel like testing.
Q1 on Saturday afternoon was, if you’re willing to call what these guys do in the last two minutes “routine,” kind of routine. That’s not to say it wasn’t pretty damned exciting. When the smoke cleared, Alex Rins’ Suzuki and Pol Espargaro’s KTM had made it into Q2 after an unusually strong performance by KTM rookie Brad Binder, a worker bee who bears watching.
Q2, featured strong performances from the eventual front row of Quartararo, Maverick Viñales and Marc Marquez. Both Pramac Ducatis and, looking slightly deranged, Crutchlow formed Row 2. Pol Espargaro, a quiet Dovizioso and a jinxed Rins would have constituted Row 3, theoretically, had Rins not suffered a “fracture/dislocation” of his right shoulder with a minute left. Oww. So he was out for Sunday’s race and his entire 2020 season has likely been trashed. For those of you still reading, Morbidelli and our old buddy Valentino Rossi joined a perplexing Joan Mir in Row 4. Baganaia, who was looking Lorenzo-like, and Mir, my personal Alien-in-waiting, were the only real surprises from Q2.
Rins reminds us that although the championship cannot be won at Round One, it can be lost. Crutchlow put himself out of the race with a hard crash in today’s warm-up. Twenty riders would start Round One in 2020; 15 would finish.
The Race
Today’s Spanish Grand Prix was bookended by two mishaps attributable to Marc Marquez. The first occurred on Lap 5, when, trying to get away from Viñales and the rest of the grid, he had a ‘moment,’ followed by an un-holy save – a career top-tenner – followed by a lengthy stroll through the gravel, followed by his re-entry into the fray in 16th position. There followed a remarkable display of riding, as Marquez sliced through the field all the way back to third place, with Viñales clearly in his sights and, in a perfect world, time to catch Quartararo. Chasing Viñales, blood in his eyes, furious with himself about Lap 5, Marquez endured the kind of violent high-side more typically associated with Jorge Lorenzo, clearly his most serious crash since 2011, when he came close to ending his career before it started in Sepang, suffering double vision for six months thereafter. Today’s crash looked bad. Repsol Honda released a statement saying Marquez suffered a “transverse diaphyseal fracture to his right humerus” and will undergo surgery Tuesday.
With Rins, Crutchlow and, finally, Marquez out of the mix, a number of lesser riders had surprisingly good days. In addition to Fabio’s first career MotoGP win, Viñales made it a factory Yamaha 1-2, with Dovi putting his Ducati on the podium late in the game. Jack Miller and Franco Morbidelli completed the top five. Boasting top ten finishes tonight are KTM’s Pol Espargaro (6th), Pramac Ducati youngster Bagnaia (7th) and KTM’s Oliveira (8th). Petrucci and Takaa Nakagami closed out the top ten. Team Suzuki, with Rins out hurt and Mir crashing, had a train wreck of a day, but all six Ducatis finished today’s race. KTM must be pleased with Espargaro, for now, and rookie Binder who, until leaving the premises briefly on Lap 7, had been running in the top eight. Oliveira turned in a solid performance with his P8 finish. Aprilia, unfortunately, was still up to its old tricks, with a P15 and a DNF to show for its efforts to go along with the bubbly public relations campaign being waged by riders and team brass.
The Undercards
Albert Arenas, having won in Qatar sometime back around the spring equinox, won again today in a hotly (!) contested Moto3 tilt, edging out Ai Ogura and Tony Arbolino. Moto3, with its 12-man lead groups, offers simply the best racing on the planet. Scot John McPhee, who came from back in the pack to challenge for the win, crashed out of the lead late shortly after Darryn Binder, another young rider with big ambitions. After two rounds, Arenas leads Ogura 50-36, with a host of riders sitting with between 16 and 20 points. Still plenty of racing left to go.
Same with Moto2, which gave us a somewhat atypical procession today. Luca Marini, who has MotoGP written all over him, fended off a brave challenge from journeyman (and series leader) Tetsuga Nagashima, while Moto2 sophomore Jorge Martin scored his third career Moto2 podium, holding Sam Lowes at bay for the last few laps. Plenty of action lower in the order; too much to keep up with here. Watch the video. But after two rounds, the top five in Moto2 include Nagashima, Lorenzo Baldassarri, Marini, Enea Bastiannini, and Aron Canet.
A Little Perspective
What were the big questions heading into MotoGP 2020?
- Why can’t Marc Marquez make it five in a row and seven for eight?
- Who will emerge as the top challenger(s)?
- Which of the young guns will make great strides and approach Alien status? (This may be a duplicate of the previous question.)
- Will Rossi start to show his age or any sign of a give-a-rip attitude?
- Can Suzuki provide sufficient horsepower to make Rins or Mir Aliens??
- Will KTM show any discernible improvements over 2019?
- Will Aprilia show any discernible improvements over 2019?
- Will the virus allow the completion of even this bastardized schedule?
- OK. Like, how many top tens will Alex Marquez see this year?
- Finally, how many of these questions are you comfortable answering after what is effectively Round One?
Our answers to those questions, after one scrap, go like this: Big crash at Jerez I. Fabio, Maverick and Miller. Bagnaia, Binder and Mir. Yes. No. Yes. No. Don’t know. Zero. Three.
We Brought Our Tranching Tool
Rider rankings after Jerez I:
Tranche I: Marc Marquez*, Fabio Quartararo
Tranche II: Maverick Viñales, Jack Miller, Andrea Dovizioso, Pol Espargaro, Franco Morbidelli, Alex Rins*
Tranche III: Pecco Bagnaia, Cal Crutchlow*, Valentino Rossi, Joan Mir, Brad Binder, Danilo Petrucci, Miguel Oliveira
Tranche IV: Takaa Nakagami, Aleix Espargaro, Iker Lecuona
Tranche V: Tito Rabat, Johann Zarco, Alex Marquez, Bradley Smith
*Injured, likely to miss time.
Next week we’ll try this again, likely missing a few premier class riders. It promises to be warm. Hopefully, the Grand Prix of Andalucía won’t be quite as hot as the Grand Prix of Spain.
2020 MotoGP Jerez 1 Results | |||
Pos. | Rider | Team | Time |
1 | Fabio Quartararo | Petronas Yamaha SRT | 41:23.796 |
2 | Maverick Viñales | Monster Energy Yamaha | +4.603 |
3 | Andrea Dovizioso | Ducati Team | +5.946 |
4 | Jack Miller | Pramac Ducati | +6.668 |
5 | Franco Morbidelli | Petronas Yamaha SRT | +6.844 |
6 | Pol Espargaro | Red Bull KTM Factory | +6.938 |
7 | Francesco Bagnaia | Pramac Ducati | +13.027 |
8 | Miguel Oliveira | Red Bull KTM Tech 3 | +13.441 |
9 | Danilo Petrucci | Ducati Team | +19.651 |
10 | Takaaki Nakagami | LCR Honda IDEMITSU | +32.973 |
11 | Johann Zarco | Hublot Reale Avintia Ducati | +25.100 |
12 | Alex Marquez | Repsol Honda | +27.350 |
13 | Brad Binder | Red Bull KTM Factory Racing | +29.640 |
14 | Tito Rabat | Hublot Reale Avintia Ducati | +32.898 |
15 | Bradley Smith | Aprilia Gresini | +39.682 |
Not Classified | |||
DNF | Marc Marquez | Repsol Honda | 4 Laps |
DNF | Iker Lecuona | Red Bull KTM Tech3 | 6 Laps |
DNF | Valentino Rossi | Monster Energy Yamaha | 7 Laps |
DNF | Aleix Espargaro | Aprilia Gresini | 23 Laps |
DNF | Joan Mir | Suzuki Ecstar | 24 Laps |
2020 MotoGP Top 10 Standings After 1 Round | |||
Pos. | Rider | Motorcycle | Points |
1 | Fabio Quartararo | Yamaha | 25 |
2 | Maverick Viñales | Yamaha | 0 |
3 | Andrea Dovizioso | Ducati | 16 |
4 | Jack Miller | Ducati | 13 |
5 | Franco Morbidelli | Yamaha | 11 |
6 | Pol Espargaro | KTM | 10 |
7 | Francesco Bagnaia | Ducati | 9 |
8 | Miguel Oliveira | KTM | 8 |
9 | Danilo Petrucci | Ducati | 7 |
10 | Takaaki Nakagami | Honda | 6 |