All class MotoGP, Moto2, Moto3 race reports/results/points from Portimao II

2021 MotoGP – Round 17 – Algarve


Francesco Bagnaia (Ducati Lenovo Team) was unstoppable at the Grande Prémio Brembo do Algarve and picked up his third victory of the season, with his latest 25-point haul handing Ducati the 2021 Constructors title too. Joan Mir (Team Suzuki Ecstar) and Jack Miller (Ducati Lenovo Team) completed the podium as the race ended slightly prematurely, with Iker Lecuona (Tech3 KTM Factory Racing) and Miguel Oliveira (Red Bull KTM Factory Racing) crashing at Turn 13 and bringing out the red flags. Riders ok, Oliveira also headed to local hospital for further checks.

Ducati secured the MotoGP Constructors’ World Championship

Portimao MotoGP Race Report

Rewinding to the start, Miller propelled his GP21 off the line very well and grabbed the holeshot diving down the hill into Turn 1, but the Australian was slightly wide, allowing polesitter Bagnaia through and into the lead. Lap 1 saw Mir then pass Miller at Turn 8, the Spaniard making his front row start count, with Fabio Quartararo (Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP) losing a couple of positions in the latter half of the top ten.

Jack Miller chasing Joan Mir

Bagnaia and Mir had the hammer down at the front, soon nearly a second clear of Miller. The Australian had Jorge Martin (Pramac Racing), Alex Marquez (LCR Honda Castrol) and Quartararo in hot pursuit too. Bagnaia really started to get the hammer down on Lap 7, his lead up to seven-tenths over Mir, who in turn was a second up the road from Miller. Third place soon went to Alex Marquez though, the double World Champion getting the job done at Turn 1 at the beginning of Lap 12.

Pecco Bagnaia and Joan Mir

As things stood then, with Bagnaia leading and Quartararo seventh, Ducati would be crowned Constructor Champions. And Pecco’s lead was stretching. With 12 laps to go, it was up to nearly two-seconds over Mir, who in turn had a second and a half over Alex Marquez. For the Ducati in the lead, it only increased and Bagnaia was nearly two and a half clear with nine to go.

Mir, meanwhile, was holding Alex Marquez and Miller at bay by just over a second, with Martin, Johann Zarco (Pramac Racing) and Quartararo a second and a half down on the podium fight in turn.

Alex Marquez and Jack Miller

A fantastic fight between Marquez and Miller was unfolding for the final podium spot too. Turn 1 witnessed Miller dive up the inside of the Honda, but Marquez was able to make the cutback work – so it was as you were with six laps to go. Quartararo was struggling to dismiss Pramac duo Martin and Zarco too, with Pol Espargaro (Repsol Honda Team) soon joining the scrap for P5.

Quartararo chasing Zarco and Martin

With five to go, at Turn 5, it was done and dusted for the newly-crowned World Champion though. Quartararo slipped out of contention and suffered his first DNF of the season – rider ok after a fairly drama-free lowside. Focus turned then turned to the Miller vs Alex Marquez fight just up ahead, the Aussie still leading that ding-dong, with everything boiling up for a final lap scrap.

Alex Marquez and Jack Miller

The last lap didn’t arrive, however, as a crash involving Lecuona and home hero Oliveira at Turn 13 brought out the Red Flags. Both riders were conscious and eventually up on their feet, but with three-quarters of the race completed, the race was declared a result at the beginning of Lap 24. It was investigated and no further action deemed necessary. Lecuona made his own error and unfortunately made contact thereafter with Oliveira in some pure bad luck for the home hero.

With that thought, it was done: Pecco’s victory ensures Ducati retain their Constructor crown, and it was a fantastic way to bounce back after the disappointment suffered by the Bologna camp at Misano. Mir returns to the rostrum for the first time since Aragon, and from his first MotoGP top three in qualifying, also turning his fortunes around after a tough Emilia-Romagna GP. Miller too ends a podium drought that stretched back to the Catalan GP, although the Aussie was ready for a 2014 Moto3 re-run, with ‘heaps of tyre’ ready to fight it out.

Ducati secured the MotoGP Constructors’ World Championship

Still, Alex Marquez’ fantastic weekend ended with the Spaniard unluckily missing out on a chance to attack for the podium, but it was nonetheless a brilliant ride from the LCR Honda Castrol rider – a best result of the season for the number 73. Zarco claimed a lonely P5 in the end, but it’s a result that confirms the Frenchman as the top Independent Team rider in 2021. Pol Espargaro’s P6 was a job well done for the Spaniard, and talking of jobs well done, the rookie in seventh impressed.

Only a few months on from his Turn 7 horror crash, Martin returned to Portugal and picked up an impressive result to help Pramac Racing become Independent Team Champions – with Martin now just three points down on Enea Bastianini (Avintia Esponsorama) in the Rookie of the Year fight. Alex Rins (Team Suzuki Ecstar) finished eighth ahead of Bastianini in ninth, with Brad Binder (Red Bull KTM Factory Racing) rounding out the top 10 from the near back of the grid.

Takaaki Nakagami (LCR Honda Idemitsu), Luca Marini (Sky VR46 Avintia), Valentino Rossi (Petronas Yamaha SRT), Andrea Dovizioso (Petronas Yamaha SRT) and Marc Marquez’ stand-in Stefan Bradl (Repsol Honda Team) completed the points, with Maverick Viñales (Aprilia Racing Team Gresini) and Franco Morbidelli (Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP) the other finishers in Portimão as Aleix Espargaro (Aprilia Racing Team Gresini) and Danilo Petrucci (Tech3 KTM Factory Racing) suffered DNFs

One round now remains, and Pecco is back on top! The Italian has secured the silver medal in the MotoGP World Championship, as well as helping Ducati secure the Constructor crown. Now, Ducati Lenovo Team and Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP go head-to-head for the Team Championship in Valencia. The season finale is just around the corner at Valencia this coming weekend!

2021 Portimao II MotoGP podium
1 Francesco Bagnaia – Ducati Lenovo Team – Ducati – 38’17.720
2 Joan Mir – Team Suzuki Ecstar – Suzuki – +2.478
3 Jack Miller – Ducati Lenovo Team – Ducati – +6.402

Portimao II MotoGP Race Results

Pos Rider Bike Time/Gap
1 Francesco BAGNAIA Ducati 38m17.720
2 Joan MIR Suzuki +2.478
3 Jack MILLER Ducati +6.402
4 Alex MARQUEZ Honda +6.453
5 Johann ZARCO Ducati +7.882
6 Pol ESPARGARO Honda +9.573
7 Jorge MARTIN Ducati +10.144
8 Alex RINS Suzuki +10.742
9 Enea BASTIANINI Ducati +13.84
10 Brad BINDER KTM +14.487
11 Takaaki NAKAGAMI Honda +20.912
12 Luca MARINI Ducati +22.45
13 Valentino ROSSI Yamaha +22.752
14 Andrea DOVIZIOSO Yamaha +26.207
15 Stefan BRADL Honda +26.284
16 Maverick VIÑALES Aprilia +26.828
17 Franco MORBIDELLI Yamaha +27.863
Not Classified
DNF Miguel OLIVEIRA KTM 1 Lap
DNF Iker LECUONA KTM 1 Lap
DNF Fabio QUARTARARO Yamaha 3 Laps
DNF Aleix ESPARGARO Aprilia 16 Laps
Not Finished 1st Lap
DNF Danilo PETRUCCI KTM 0 Lap

MotoGP Championship Standings

Pos Rider Bike Nation Points
1 Fabio QUARTARARO Yamaha FRA 267
2 Francesco BAGNAIA Ducati ITA 227
3 Joan MIR Suzuki SPA 195
4 Jack MILLER Ducati AUS 165
5 Johann ZARCO Ducati FRA 163
6 Marc MARQUEZ Honda SPA 142
7 Brad BINDER KTM RSA 142
8 Aleix ESPARGARO Aprilia SPA 113
9 Maverick VIÑALES Aprilia SPA 106
10 Pol ESPARGARO Honda SPA 100
11 Alex RINS Suzuki SPA 99
12 Enea BASTIANINI Ducati ITA 94
13 Miguel OLIVEIRA KTM POR 92
14 Jorge MARTIN Ducati SPA 91
15 Takaaki NAKAGAMI Honda JPN 76
16 Alex MARQUEZ Honda SPA 67
17 Franco MORBIDELLI Yamaha ITA 42
18 Luca MARINI Ducati ITA 41
19 Iker LECUONA KTM SPA 38
20 Valentino ROSSI Yamaha ITA 38
21 Danilo PETRUCCI KTM ITA 37
22 Stefan BRADL Honda GER 14
23 Michele PIRRO Ducati ITA 12
24 Andrea DOVIZIOSO Yamaha ITA 8
25 Dani PEDROSA KTM SPA 6
26 Lorenzo SAVADORI Aprilia ITA 4
27 Tito RABAT Ducati SPA 1
Pecco Bagnaia and Jack Miller together on the podium overnight at Portimao

Constructor Standings

Pos Constructor Points
1 DUCATI 332
2 YAMAHA 298
3 SUZUKI 227
4 HONDA 211
5 KTM 196
6 APRILIA 114

Team Standings

Pos Team Points
1 DUCATI LENOVO TEAM 392
2 MONSTER ENERGY YAMAHA MOTOGP 364 364
3 TEAM SUZUKI ECSTAR 294
4 PRAMAC RACING 258
5 REPSOL HONDA TEAM 250
6 RED BULL KTM FACTORY RACING 234
7 LCR HONDA 143
8 ESPONSORAMA RACING 135
9 APRILIA RACING TEAM GRESINI 128

Moto2

Remy Gardner (Red Bull KTM Ajo) secured what’s likely the most important victory of his career at the Grande Prémio Brembo do Algarve and now takes a 23-point lead into the final round in Valencia. The Australian got the better of rival and teammate Raul Fernandez as the Spaniard had to settle for P2 despite an early lead. Sam Lowes (Elf Marc VDS Racing Team) completed the podium, ultimately less than a second away from Fernandez.

2021 Portimao II Moto2 podium
1 Remy Gardner – Red Bull KTM Ajo – Kalex – 39’36.275
2 Raul Fernandez – Red Bull KTM Ajo – Kalex – +3.014
3 Sam Lowes – Elf Marc VDS Racing Team – Kalex – +3.899

As the lights went out, Raul Fernandez and Gardner both made good starts and they launched into Turn 1 as they lined up on the grid – P1 and P2. Marco Bezzecchi (Sky Racing Team VR46) made a lightning start from seventhto push his way up into P3 in the opening exchanges too, and the Italian was soon ahead of Gardner to boot. The top three – Raul Fernandez, Bezzecchi and Gardner – were split by just over a second in the early stages, with Cameron Beaubier (American Racing) in an impressive fourth, two seconds down on the podium fight.

After shadowing Bezzecchi for a few laps, Gardner was back up into P2 on Lap 9, with Raul Fernandez’ lead standing at just over a second. As things were, the gap between the Red Bull KTM Ajo pair would have been 13 points heading to Valencia, but Gardner was starting to reel his teammate in…

Turn 1, Lap 13. Gardner, with more grip, was truly on the scene and passed Raul Fernandez down the hill. Bezzecchi was three seconds further behind, so it looked set to send in a duel, but Gardner wasn’t pulling away. The number 25 of his teammate was latched onto his rear tyre, with Lowes the new threat in P3 as the Brit caught and passed Bezzecchi.

Raul Fernandez

Heading into the final five laps, Raul Fernandez was still hanging in there but couldn’t get close enough to make a move. But with three to go, the gap went up over a second, and it only increased from there…

By the last lap, Lowes was lapping nearly a second a lap quicker than Raul Fernandez too, and if the number 22 overtook the number 25, that would hand the title to Gardner. And the Brit got close but not quite close enough, with Gardner taking 25 points under extreme pressure and in a fair bit of pain after his crash on Friday. Fernandez hung on in second, and Lowes completed the podium after another good ride at the front, pulling a little more clear in fourth overall heading to Valencia.

Remy Gardner

Aron Canet (QuieroCorredor Aspar Team) ultimately pipped Beaubier to P4 but the duo crossed the line just 0.005 apart, and the American equalled his best Moto2 result. Celestino Vietti (Sky Racing Team VR46) claimed P6 as the Italian once again impresses, the rookie beating Jorge Navarro (Termozeta Speed Up) by eight tenths. Bezzecchi slipped from P2 to P8 at the chequered flag. Augusto Fernandez (Elf Marc VDS Racing Team) and Marcel Schrötter (Liqui Moly Intact GP) rounded out the top 10.

Fabio Di Giannantonio (Federal Oil Gresini Moto2) couldn’t covert a front row start into a podium attack, the Italian finishing P11, with Hector Garzo (Flexbox HP40), Stefano Manzi (Flexbox HP40), Marcos Ramirez (American Racing) and Bo Bendsneyder (Pertamina Mandalika SAG Team) picked up the final points.

Remy Gardner

Gardner’s victory sees him have one hand and four fingers on the 2021 Moto2 World title, but it’s not over until it’s over. A phenomenal season finale is coming up in Valencia between the Red Bull KTM Ajo duo… so who comes out on top after a thrilling season?

The Australian has gathered 12 podiums through a consistent term that included wins in Italy, Catalunya, Germany, Great Britain and now Portugal. Fernandez has 11 rostrum appearances. Gardner and Fernandez’s will end their gripping dispute at next week’s season-closing Gran Premio Motul de la Comunitat Valenciana on Sunday November 14th.

Remy Gardner

One of the hardest races and one of my best. Especially with all that pressure. I was pretty clear that we’d go with the hard tyre and it worked out. I had to really push in the first stage of race to stay with Raul. My ribs were hurting, and it was really tough. I don’t know how I did it to be honest.

Remy Gardner

Portimao II Moto2 Race Results

Pos Rider Bike Time/Gap
1 Remy GARDNER Kalex 39m36.275
2 Raul FERNANDEZ Kalex +3.014
3 Sam LOWES Kalex +3.899
4 Aron CANET Boscoscuro +7.616
5 Cameron BEAUBIER Kalex +7.621
6 Celestino VIETTI Kalex +10.021
7 Jorge NAVARRO Boscoscuro +10.908
8 Marco BEZZECCHI Kalex +11.586
9 Augusto FERNANDEZ Kalex +13.121
10 Marcel SCHROTTER Kalex +13.286
11 Fabio DI GIANNANTONIO Kalex +14.614
12 Hector GARZO Kalex +25.538
13 Stefano MANZI Kalex +26.511
14 Marcos RAMIREZ Kalex +27.225
15 Bo BENDSNEYDER Kalex +28.345
16 Fermín ALDEGUER Boscoscuro +28.412
17 Simone CORSI MV Agusta +32.282
18 Hafizh SYAHRIN NTS +35.387
19 Thomas LUTHI Kalex +39.184
20 Tony ARBOLINO Kalex +43.803
21 Tetsuta NAGASHIMA Kalex ++43.432
22 Nicolò BULEGA Kalex +43.491
23 Barry BALTUS NTS +45.847
24 Joe ROBERTS Kalex +54.35
25 Piotr BIESIEKIRSKI Kalex +1m08.619
Not Classified
DNF Lorenzo BALDASSARRI MV Agusta 9 Laps
DNF Xavi VIERGE Kalex 13 Laps
DNF Jake DIXON Kalex 14 Laps
DNF Ai OGURA Kalex 21 Laps
DNF Albert ARENAS Boscoscuro 22 Laps

Moto2 Championship Standings

Pos Rider Bike Nation Points
1 Remy GARDNER Kalex AUS 305
2 Raul FERNANDEZ Kalex SPA 282
3 Marco BEZZECCHI Kalex ITA 214
4 Sam LOWES Kalex GBR 181
5 Augusto FERNANDEZ Kalex SPA 158
6 Aron CANET Boscoscuro SPA 153
7 Fabio DI GIANNANTONIO Kalex ITA 141
8 Ai OGURA Kalex JPN 120
9 Jorge NAVARRO Boscoscuro SPA 98
10 Marcel SCHROTTER Kalex GER 91
11 Xavi VIERGE Kalex SPA 83
12 Celestino VIETTI Kalex ITA 76
13 Joe ROBERTS Kalex USA 59
14 Tony ARBOLINO Kalex ITA 51
15 Cameron BEAUBIER Kalex USA 50
16 Bo BENDSNEYDER Kalex NED 46
17 Somkiat CHANTRA Kalex THA 37
18 Marcos RAMIREZ Kalex SPA 37
19 Stefano MANZI Kalex ITA 33
20 Jake DIXON Kalex GBR 30
21 Albert ARENAS Boscoscuro SPA 28
22 Thomas LUTHI Kalex SWI 23
23 Hector GARZO Kalex SPA 16
24 Simone CORSI MV Agusta ITA 16
25 Fermín ALDEGUER Boscoscuro SPA 13
26 Nicolò BULEGA Kalex ITA 12
27 Lorenzo DALLA PORTA Kalex ITA 10
28 Hafizh SYAHRIN NTS MAL 8
29 Alonso LOPEZ Boscoscuro SPA 4
30 Lorenzo BALDASSARRI MV Agusta ITA 3
31 Barry BALTUS NTS BEL 2

Moto3

In an unbelievable Moto3 Grande Prémio Brembo do Algarve, Pedro Acosta (Red Bull KTM Ajo) took both victory and the 2021 World Championship in a dramatic penultimate round of the season. Dennis Foggia (Leopard Racing) was taken out at Turn 3 on the final lap after leading for much of the race, the Italian experiencing some late heartbreak after a sensational run of form. After that incident, Andrea Migno (Rivacold Snipers Team) and Niccolo Antonelli (Avintia VR46 Academy) came through to complete the podium behind Acosta.

Polesitter Sergio Garcia (MuchoNeumatico GASGAS Aspar Team) grabbed the holeshot into Turn 1, with Adrian Fernandez (Sterilgarda Max Racing Team) getting the better of John McPhee (Petronas Sprinta Racing) down the hill. Foggia lost a couple of places on the first lap but the pocket rocket slipstreamed his way to P1 at the beginning of Lap 2, with Acosta 12th at the end of the first lap.

However, Acosta was carving his way through the pack and soon enough was 6th. Foggia, up front, had a stellar Lap 3 to set the fastest lap of the race and stretch a lead over Darryn Binder (Petronas Sprinta Racing) to over half a second, but Acosta remained on the march and was up to P4 after passing Fernandez and McPhee – the latter crashing unhurt at Turn 13 on Lap 5.

By Lap 9, Acosta finally got the better of Binder into Turn 5 and the top two in the title chase were now 1-2, with Foggia leading Acosta. Diving down the hill into Turn 1 on Lap 10, the number 37 then led for the first time. However, he was wide, allowing Foggia and Binder to get back past. Now though, Acosta had his teammate Jaume Masia with him in the fight at the front too…

Just like that, Masia was past Acosta at the start of Lap 13, then shoved his way up the inside of Foggia at Turn 3. Masia sat Foggia up, the Spaniard taking the lead and Acosta following him through. Turn 5 on the same lap saw the Championship leader then take the lead again too, but Masia returned the favour on the front straight. Acosta then looked behind him and lost some time, dropping to sixth as Foggia got back into the lead.

y five to go it was Foggia-Binder-Acosta, and at his favoured Turn 13, the number 37 grabbed second from Binder and once again the two title contenders were leading the group. With four to go, it was as you were. With three to go, not quite. Turn 3 saw Acosta overtake Foggia, and Turn 5 then saw Masia crash out of the battle.

Two to go. Foggia reeled in Acosta and a brilliant move up the inside at Turn 11 gave the Italian the lead once more as the riders clocked onto the final lap: Foggia 1st, Acosta 2nd.

But then the drama came at Turn 3. Acosta dived up the inside for the lead, and behind them Binder was in hot. The South African collided with the back of Foggia, who crashed, with Garcia also getting caught up in the incident. And that, ultimately, was all she wrote for Foggia’s title chances.

Acosta kept it pinned up ahead and making no mistake on the last lap, took victory. From P14 on the grid to the top step, he is the 2021 World Champion. Migno and Antonelli avoided the Turn 3 drama to come through, the Italians getting the better side of luck this time around to complete the podium.

2021 Portimao II Moto3 podium
1 Pedro Acosta – Red Bull KTM Ajo – KTM – 38’04.339
2 Andrea Migno – Rivacold Snipers Team – Honda – +0.354
3 Niccolo Antonelli – Avintia VR46 Academy – KTM – +0.880

Jeremy Alcoba (Indonesian Racing Gresini Moto3) picked up P4 ahead of Izan Guevara (MuchoNeaumatico GASGAS Aspar Team) and Ayumu Sasaki (Red Bull KTM Tech3) – the latter duo producing fine performances after taking Long Lap penalties in the race. Romano Fenati (Sterilgarda Max Racing Team), Xavier Artigas (Leopard Racing), Tatsuki Suzuki (SIC58 Squadra Corse) and Filip Salač (CarXpert PrüstelGP) rounded out the top 10.

Fernandez, Carlos Tatay (Avintia Esponsorama Moto3), FIM Moto3 Junior World Championship riders Daniel Holgado (Red Bull KTM Tech3) and Joel Kelso (CIP Green Power), and Alberto Surra (Rivacold Snipers Team) completed the points.

Binder, after causing the crash that saw Foggia and Garcia go down on the last lap, crossed the line in P4 but was then disqualified from the race.

Joel Kelso had answered a last-minute call-up from the CIP-GREEN POWER Moto3 Team that he will join in 2022 last week to replace regular incumbent Maximilian Kofler, after the Austrian returned a positive Covid-19 test. Arriving in Portugal only a couple of hours before first practice, Kelso qualified 19th before then slowly working his way up during the race to finish 14th. Team-mate Kaito Toba struggled more and crashed at the first corner on the first lap.

Joel Kelso – P14

Overall it was a good weekend. What can I say? The team and I did a great job this weekend. We made a lot of progress with the bike, and that’s a very positive thing for the coming year. Honestly, it gives me a lot more motivation. Everything went incredibly well in the opening 13 laps until I made a small mistake. In the end we finished 14th, so two points. I also set my best lap on this track. Overall, I am very happy. I know I could have done better, but anyway, we have to take the positive. We worked well. We’ll see what happens after that, but I’m looking forward to next season with this team.”

Joel Kelso

So there we have it – Pedro Acosta is the 2021 Moto3 World Champion. A young Spaniard taking the world by storm, Acosta has been nothing short of phenomenal this season and becomes the first rookie lightweight class Champion since Loris Capirossi in 1990. Commiserations to Foggia, who now heads to Valencia hoping to end his classy campaign on a high, but both riders have given us a title chase to remember. As has Garcia in the earlier season – and the Aspar rider’s record at the Circuit Ricardo Tormo teases a highflying end to the season….

Pedro Acosta – 2021 Moto3 World Champion

It’s unbelievable, I was thinking on the in-lap about everything that’s happened this last year. Less than a year ago I lost the opportunity to come here with another team, and finally Aki, Red Bull and KTM gave me the opportunity. But they didn’t give me a team, they gave me a family. I didn’t win this alone, we won this together. The guys didn’t stop believing in me when in the middle of the season I had some bad races or when I crashed, you know. Everyone believe in me and this is for everyone in the team, for Aki, Red Bull, KTM, all my mechanics. Everybody.

Pedro Acosta

“I’m not proud of myself, I’m more super proud of them who didn’t stop believing. Everybody was talking about it… we did it together for sure. I think they gave me the mentality of not riding alone, I ride with my team, with my close circle. We know we won this together.

Pedro Acosta

“I preferred to not look behind and just try to push. The only thing I could do was push and I did. I’m proud to fight with Dennis, and for sure he’s going to fight for the Championship next year. I’m proud to fight with these guys.”

Pedro Acosta

Portimao II Moto3 Race Results

Pos Rider Bike Time/Gap
1 Pedro ACOSTA KTM 38m04.339
2 Andrea MIGNO Honda +0.354
3 Niccolò ANTONELLI KTM +0.88
4 Jeremy ALCOBA Honda +1.768
5 Izan GUEVARA GASGAS +1.839
6 Ayumu SASAKI KTM +1.874
7 Romano FENATI Husqvarna +1.972
8 Xavier ARTIGAS Honda +2.333
9 Tatsuki SUZUKI Honda +3.423
10 Filip SALAC KTM +6.591
11 Adrian FERNANDEZ Husqvarna +6.94
12 Carlos TATAY KTM +9.392
13 Daniel HOLGADO KTM +9.93
14 Joel KELSO KTM +9.996
15 Alberto SURRA Honda +10.416
16 Stefano NEPA KTM +11.65
17 Lorenzo FELLON Honda +11.695
18 Riccardo ROSSI KTM +11.736
19 Jaume MASIA KTM +13.616
20 Yuki KUNII Honda +30.001
21 Ryusei YAMANAKA KTM +30.183
22 Andi Farid IZDIHAR Honda +30.249
Kaito TOBA KTM +8 Laps
Not Classified
DNF Dennis FOGGIA Honda 1 Lap
DNF Sergio GARCIA GASGAS 1 Lap
DNF John MCPHEE Honda 17 Laps
DNF Darryn BINDER Honda 0 Lap

Moto3 Championship Standings

Pos Rider Bike Nation Points
1 Pedro ACOSTA KTM SPA 259
2 Dennis FOGGIA Honda ITA 213
3 Sergio GARCIA GASGAS SPA 168
4 Romano FENATI Husqvarna ITA 156
5 Jaume MASIA KTM SPA 155
6 Niccolò ANTONELLI KTM ITA 145
7 Darryn BINDER Honda RSA 136
8 Izan GUEVARA GASGAS SPA 116
9 Ayumu SASAKI KTM JPN 114
10 Andrea MIGNO Honda ITA 110
11 Jeremy ALCOBA Honda SPA 85
12 Deniz ÖNCÜ KTM TUR 84
13 Tatsuki SUZUKI Honda JPN 76
14 John MCPHEE Honda GBR 72
15 Kaito TOBA KTM JPN 64
16 Gabriel RODRIGO Honda ARG 60
17 Filip SALAC KTM CZE 58
18 Stefano NEPA KTM ITA 53
19 Xavier ARTIGAS Honda SPA 47
20 Ryusei YAMANAKA KTM JPN 47
21 Carlos TATAY KTM SPA 32
22 Riccardo ROSSI KTM ITA 29
23 Adrian FERNANDEZ Husqvarna SPA 28
24 Jason DUPASQUIER KTM SWI 27
25 Yuki KUNII Honda JPN 15
26 Maximilian KOFLER KTM AUT 10
27 Elia BARTOLINI KTM ITA 7
28 Daniel HOLGADO KTM SPA 4
29 Andi Farid IZDIHAR Honda INA 4
30 Syarifuddin AZMAN Honda MAL 3
31 Joel KELSO KTM AUS 2
32 Alberto SURRA Honda ITA 1

2021 FIM MotoGP World Championship calendar

Round Date Location
Round 1 Mar-28 Qatar, Losail (night race)
Round 2 Apr-04 Doha, Losail (night race)
Round 3 Apr-18 Portugal, Portimao
Round 4 May-02 Spain, Jerez
Round 5 May-16 France, Le Mans
Round 6 May-30 Italy- Mugello
Round 7 Jun-06 Catalunya, Barcelona
Round 8 Jun-20 Germany, Sachsenring
Round 9 Jun-27 Netherlands, Assen
Round 10 Aug-8 Styria, Red Bull Ring
Round 11 Aug-15 Austria, Red Bull Ring
Round 12 Aug-29 Great Britain, Silverstone
Round 13 Sep-12 Aragon, Motorland Aragon
Round 14 Sep-19 San Marino, Misano
Round 15 Oct-03 Americas, Circuit of the Americas
Round 16 Oct-24 Italy e dell’Emilia Romagna, Misano
Round 17 Nov-7 Portugal, Algarve
Round 18 Nov-14 Valencia, Circuit Ricardo Tormo

Source: MCNews.com.au

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