Bezzecchi bags maiden Moto2™ pole

However, the EG 0,0 Marc VDS rider was on a roll and has his sights set on pole position. Lowes was up on Bezzecchi’s time through the third split but couldn’t quite hold it to the line, taking P2 to go under half a tenth slower than Bezzecchi. Navarro was also looking threatening in the closing stages of Q2 but he too couldn’t quite get the whole lap hooked up, the Spaniard going P4 and just 0.015 off the front row. Marini was then on a good lap on his final run, but the Italian slowed up before the line with little improvements coming elsewhere inside the top 10.

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Pole again for Quartararo as Viñales has lap cancelled

In soaring Q2 conditions, could anyone break the Yamaha dominance that has reigned this weekend? At the beginning of the session, it was Brad Binder (Red Bull KTM Factory Racing) and Bagnaia who set the first banker laps, but soon enough Viñales was at the summit with a 1:37.217. What could Quartararo respond with? The Spanish GP polesitter and winner slotted into P2, before Bagnaia split the Yamaha riders as the Italian improved again. Heading into pitlane, Viñales led Bagnaia and Quartararo by two tenths, with Binder, Takaaki Nakagami (LCR Honda Idemitsu) and Q1 graduate Franco Morbidelli (Petronas Yamaha SRT) sitting on the provisional second row.

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Oliveira tops Q1, Dovizioso misses out & Marquez sets no lap

Red Bull KTM Tech 3’s Miguel Oliveira and Petronas Yamaha SRT’s Franco Morbidelli have progressed through to Q2 at the Gran Premio Red Bull de Andalucia, as Ducati Team’s Andrea Dovizioso failed to make it into the fight for pole position just six days on from finishing on the podium at the same circuit. The Italian will, therefore, start from 14th on the grid.

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Nakagami leads Quartararo in FP4, Marc Marquez 16th

Takaaki Nakagami (LCR Honda Idemitsu) topped FP4 thanks to a 1:37.514 at the Gran Premio Red Bull de Andalucia, with Fabio Quartararo (Petronas Yamaha SRT) 0.165 off the Japanese rider in second. Pol Espargaro (Red Bull KTM Factory Racing) finished P3 ahead of qualifying, with his future teammate Marc Marquez (Repsol Honda Team) finishing 16th in FP4.

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Suzuki bags a hat-trick of Moto3™ pole positions

Row three will consist of Jeremy Alcoba (Kömmerling Gresini Moto3), John McPhee (Petronas Sprinta Racing), after a mistake in the final sector of his final flying lap prevented any late improvement, and the Italian Vietti, who’s SKY Racing Team VR46 teammate Andrea Migno crashed out late on without injury. Leading the fourth row of the grid is Leopard Racing’s Jaume Masia, ahead of the fastest man to have progressed through from Q1 earlier on, Reale Avintia Moto3’s Carlos Tatay, and Red Bull KTM Ajo’s Kaito Toba.

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Martin pips Lowes to Moto2™ top spot

Spanish GP polesitter Jorge Martin (Red Bull KTM Ajo) will lead the Moto2™ riders into qualifying at the Gran Premio Red Bull de Andalucia thanks to his 1:41.175 in FP3. Sam Lowes (EG 0,0 Marc VDS) was second place, just 0.013 off top spot, with Lorenzo Baldassarri (Flexbox HP 40) three tenths off in third.

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Marc Marquez to take part in FP4

Speaking ahead of FP4, Repsol Honda Team Manager Alberto Puig said: “The plan is to try again and see if he can do more laps. This morning was like, let’s say contact, to see if he could ride. Now the second step is to see how much he can ride – race distance. Of course we will not do many many laps, but at least to see if he can do 6/7 laps in a row, it would be a step.”

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Analysis and data behind Marc Marquez’ horrific highside

To everyone’s surprise, Marc Marquez (Repsol Honda Team) was back in the Circuito de Jerez-Angel Nieto paddock on Thursday with the intention of participating in the Gran Premio Red Bull de Andalucia, despite being the victim of a huge highside last Sunday that resulted in a fractured right humerus. Better yet, the Catalan, who had a plate fitted during surgery in Barcelona just three days ago now, ​received the green light from doctors on Thursday. In order not to strain his arm too much, the eight-time World Champion decided not to participate in any track activity on Friday ahead of riding on Saturday.

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FP3: Viñales slams in lap record as Marc Marquez returns

In the end, Marc Marquez would finish 19th, 1.2 off the all-time lap record after completing 18 laps. Will we see the eight-time Champion in FP4, qualifying and the race? In the meantime, Q1 is set to be a barnstormer as riders like Morbidelli, Dovizioso and more go head-to-head. 0.9 seconds split Viñales to Alex Marquez (Repsol Honda Team) in P16 – that’s how close it is. Alex Rins (Team Suzuki Ecstar) sat out FP3, we’ll be seeing the Spaniard back out in FP4 as he recovers from his shoulder injury. 

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Vinales tops FP3 with new lap record | Marc P20

2020 MotoGP Round Two – Jerez
Gran Premio Red Bull de Andalucía

Free Practice 3

Marc Marquez sat out Friday’s proceedings at Jerez after that sickening crash during the race last Sunday that led to him having surgery to plate his broken right humerus in Madrid on Tuesday. Early indications were that the defending World Champion would not be back for a few weeks but the 27-year-old Spaniard insisted that he wanted to try and ride this weekend and subsequently passed a fitness test on Thursday when he returned to Jerez. All cameras were on the Repsol Honda garage as Marc prepared to take to the circuit in Saturday morning’s 45-minute FP3 session.

Maverick Vinales had topped the charts on Friday while Valentino Rossi made it a Monster Energy Yamaha 1-2 ahead of KTM’s Brad Binder. The South African rookie very impressive in both sessions on Friday as was fourth place Franco Morbidelli.  Jack Miller was the quickest Ducati on Friday in P7, only half-a-second behind Vinales’ benchmark while the top 16 were covered by less than a second.

Marquez was not the only rider returning to action as Cal Crutchlow had also gone under the knife on Tuesday to have a screw inserted into his broken left scaphoid. Alex Rins had sat out the race last weekend after breaking his collarbone but returned to action on Friday through some obvious discomfort, that pair had brought up the rear of the field on Friday.

In FP3 on Saturday riders did not hang about right from the off with Takaaki Nakagami, Pol Espargaro and Fabio Quartararo all immediately into the 1m37.2s, quicker than the best times they had set on Friday.

Marc Marquez went out and completed five laps before returning to the pits after setting a best of 1m38.246 to be 18th on combined times. He certainly didn’t look as animated and aggressive on the motorcycle as he generally does but he was elbow-down from lap two. After talks with his team and a few minutes rest Marquez rejoined the circuit.

Pecco Bagnaia then dropped in the first 1m36s lap of the weekend, a 1m36.847 by the Pramac Ducati man to go top on the combined time-sheets with less than 20-minutes remaining in this FP3 session.

With 20-minutes remaining Marquez picked up his pace, a 1m37.882 for 11th in the session thus far and P16 on combined times, quicker than his team-mate and younger brother Alex.

Fabio Quartararo then dropped in a new all-time lap record of 1m36.643 while Nakagami went P2 on 1m36.842 to push Bagnaia back to P3.

Vinales had been putting in plenty of laps but it was not until there was only 13-minutes left in the session that Maverick improved his benchmark time from Friday, a 1m36.763 to go P2. Quartararo then dropped in a 1m36.655, after being quicker than his previous fastest lap through the first three splits he lost a little in the final sector and failed to improve.

Jack Miller pushed his way up to P5 on combined times with a 1m37.136 but Pol Espargaro then dropped in a 1m36.955 to relegate Miller to P6 with ten-minutes remaining in the session. At this T-minus-10 juncture Rossi was P7 courtesy of his Friday time, Binder P8, Morbidelli P9 and Joan Mir rounded out the top ten ahead of Johann Zarco. Marc Marquez was P18 after putting in 15 laps.

With two-minutes remaining Maverick Vinales went P1 with a 1m36.584 to lower the outright lap record and push Quartararo back to P2.

Jack Miller then put in his time attack and set his fastest ever lap of Jerez with a 1m36.710 to go P3 and top Ducati.

When the clocks stopped less than half-a-second covered the entire top ten.  Of course it is that top ten that earn automatic qualification straight through to Q2. Andrea Dovizioso only P14 thus will have to contest Q1.

Alex Rins sat out FP3 but Crutchlow was circulating on the LCR Honda and finished P17 on combined times, two-tenths quicker than Marc Marquez who finished up in P20.

MotoGP riders will be back on track tonight at 2130 for FP4 ahead of the two qualifying sessions, the first of which gets underway at 2210 followed by Q2 at 2235.

MotoGP FP3 Combined Times

Pos Rider Bike Time/Gap
1 M.Viñales YAMAHA 1m36.584
2 F.Quartararo YAMAHA +0.059
3 J.Miller DUCATI +0.126
4 T.Nakagami HONDA +0.258
5 F.Bagnaia DUCATI +0.263
6 D.Petrucci DUCATI +0.353
7 B.Binder KTM +0.354
8 V.Rossi YAMAHA +0.404
9 P.Espargaro KTM +0.411
10 J.Mir SUZUKI +0.469
11 A.Espargaro APRILIA +0.486
12 F.Morbidelli YAMAHA +0.596
13 M.Oliveira KTM +0.694
14 A.Dovizioso DUCATI +0.711
15 J.Zarco DUCATI +0.720
16 A.Marquez HONDA +0.973
17 C.Crutchlow HONDA +1.037
18 T.Rabat DUCATI +1.244
19 I.Lecuona KTM +1.248
20 M.Marquez HONDA +1.298
21 B.Smith APRILIA +1.432
22 A.Rins SUZUKI +2.517

Source: MCNews.com.au