Bagnaia headlined in MotoGP™ as he received his trophy after making history as the first Ducati rider to take the crown in 15 years, completing the triple crown, and he picked up the BMW M Award for best qualifier in the MotoGP™ class too. Fabio Quartararo (Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP™) was on stage as runner up, and Enea Bastianini (Gresini Racing MotoGP™) completed the top three as well as taking the honour of top Independent Team rider.
The plan today was to throw everything at it today and better our overall championship standing as we had nothing to lose, but hey sometimes things don’t always go to plan. Nonetheless I want to congratulate Ducati and Pecco on his championship, he threw it all at it, never gave up and it shows with an attitude like that you can accomplish anything you set out to achieve. It has been a special year in MotoGP the bikes are so damn fast, so damn competitive and with all of us boys so damn close and the racing truly being so unpredictable week in and week out, there really is no sport like it on the planet. I’ll save my thoughts and words on my final ride with Ducati Corse for another post but for now it is time to kick back and take it all in, it’s been a hell of a ride with the next one just around the corner! 😁🤟
Relive the highlights of the recently crowned World Champion’s career from Moto3™ to MotoGP™
It’s been a long time coming, but Ducati finally have their second MotoGP™ World Championship. The efforts of the irrepressible Francesco Bagnaia in 2022 have delivered a first title in 15 years to the Borgo Panigale factory, and a second world title to the Italian rider.
It is undoubtedly Pecco’s crowning achievement in the sport, but there have been others, and below we take a look at the top five moments from his career to date!
1. A breakthrough 2016 campaign
Having been on the World Championship stage for the previous three seasons, 2016 saw Bagnaia mature into a fine rider with Moto3™ title credentials. He claimed six podiums during that campaign, two of which were wins when riding with the Aspar team. That first-ever win came at Assen, where he rode his Mahindra machinery to the top step.
Mahindra make history 30/06/2016
At the 2016 Dutch GP Mahindra created a new chapter in their history after taking their first World Championship victory in the Moto3™ race.
However, it was his second victory, which fittingly came in Malaysia, that saw him rewarded with a chance to make his debut on MotoGP™ machinery at the end-of-season Valencia Test on a Ducati; an opportunity he grabbed with both hands.
2. Taking a maiden World Championship in 2018
Roll the clock back to four years ago, and Pecco was celebrating becoming the Moto2™ World Champion at Sepang. Riding with the VR46 Racing Team, a third place finish was enough to see him over the line against Miguel Oliveira (Red Bull KTM Factory Racing) as he cracked 300 points.
Pecco Bagnaia masters Moto2™: a Champion is crowned 28/10/2018
The SKY Racing Team VR46 rider claims the 2018 Moto2™ World Championship Crown, as he bids farewell to the intermediate class
In total, he recorded eight wins and four further podiums on his way to Championship glory.
Bagnaia: “It’s just been incredible” 04/11/2018
The Sky VR46 rider finished third at Sepang, securing him the 2018 intermediate class crown
3. Trumping Marquez in MotorLand
Having moved to the premier class in 2019, Bagnaia experienced all the ups and downs on the learning curve. A first podium came in 2020 at Misano, before a week later he crashed out of a comfortable lead at the same circuit. After even more near misses, that breakthrough win finally came in 2021, and how!
How the world watched a battle for the ages in Aragon! 15/09/2021
Marc Marquez tried seven different manoeuvres in the closing stages at MotorLand, but Pecco Bagnaia held firm to claim a maiden MotoGP™ win
In what was an instant classic, Pecco held his nerve to withstand a late onslaught from Marc Marquez on the final laps, denying the Repsol Honda rider on seven different occasions to take his first-ever MotoGP™ victory. That win had a domino effect, as the Italian took three more wins and a podium in the closing five races to launch a late title charge.
“Rossi told me that today was going to be my day” – Bagnaia 12/09/2021
The Aragon GP race winner held off some “crazy” Marc Marquez overtakes and dedicated victory to the VR46 academy, Ducati and his mentor
4. Making Ducati history
Once Bagnaia gets a run of form, he can be nigh on unstoppable. Having ironed out the inconsistencies that plagued the first half of the campaign, the number 63 recovered from back-to-back crashes in Catalunya and Germany by going on a four-race winning streak, the first time a Ducati rider has ever done so. Consecutive victories at Assen, Silverstone, the Red Bull Ring and Misano gave him the platform to launch his extraordinary 91-point title comeback.
“The pace was incredible” – Bagnaia 04/09/2022
Hear the San Marino GP winner analyse exactly how he took maximum points at his home Grand Prix
5. Pecco Bagnaia, MotoGP™ World Champion
Without a doubt, the highlight of his career has come this weekend in Valencia. The Italian’s ninth place, together with a fourth for Fabio Quartararo, has left him with a 17-point lead at the end of the season. This means that Francesco Bagnaia has delivered the first Riders’ Championship to Ducati since 2007, and becomes the first Italian Champion since a certain Valentino Rossi in 2009.
FREE: Bagnaia reaches the promised land in Valencia 06/11/2022
Enjoy the celebrations as the Italian ended 15 years of hurt for Ducati, and took his first-ever MotoGP™ title, by finishing P9 in Spain
Seven victories and three other podiums have helped Bagnaia reach the holy grail, and it is very much deserved. Congratulations Pecco!
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Pecco crowned Champion with Ducati in a tense decider which saw the title contenders make contact
The Ducati Lenovo Team’s Francesco Bagnaia has won the 2022 MotoGP™ World Championship by finishing ninth in the final race of the season at the Gran Premio Motul de la Comunitat Valenciana – a first such title for the man mentored by Valentino Rossi. Monster Energy Yamaha’s Fabio Quartararo started the Grand Prix needing nothing less than victory to have any hope of a second straight crown but finished a fighting fourth in a contest won by Team Suzuki Ecstar’s Alex Rins – one more victory for the Hamamatsu manufacturer. Brad Binder (Red Bull KTM Factory Racing) and Jorge Martin (Prima Pramac Racing) rounded out the podium after 27 laps around the Circuit Ricardo Tormo.
Early contact between Bagnaia and Quartararo
Rins qualified on the middle of Row 2 but made a brilliant start and led the field to the first corner, ahead of pole-sitter Martin and Jack Miller (Ducati Lenovo Team). Quartararo took a wide berth at the Turn 2 braking zone, emerging behind Marc Marquez (Repsol Honda Team) and in a battle for fifth with none other than Bagnaia. When Marquez attacked Miller for third on the opening lap, Quartararo squeezed his Yamaha down the inside of the Australian’s Ducati at Turn 8 as well, and he was up to fourth.
Miller hit back at the start of Lap 2, forcing Quartararo to pick up his YZR-M1 at Turn 2 with a pass which incentivised Bagnaia to also have a look. The title contenders made contact which pulled a wing off the factory-entered Ducati, but Bagnaia was ahead of his key rival. It stayed that way until Lap 4, when Quartararo was down his inside at Turn 6 and back into fifth position – but facing a task to catch the top four.
MUST-SEE: The contenders clash in an electric race start! 06/11/2022
A wing went flying through the air after Fabio Quartararo and Pecco Bagnaia collided during an aggressive opening at the Valencia GP
Bagnaia starts to slide as Marquez crashes
In said top four, Miller moved back into the podium positions when he passed Marquez on Lap 6 at Turn 1, before the eight-time World Champion crashed out altogether, four laps later at Turn 8. In the meantime, Quartararo had shaken Bagnaia, who, due to some combination of caution and the damage from his contact with ‘El Diablo’, was on the slide. He had already been overtaken for sixth by Brad Binder when he gave Joan Mir (Team Suzuki Ecstar) an easy position on Lap 13 at Turn 14.
Up the road, Rins was trying to break away but the rest of the top five was compressing, which was both good and bad news for Quartararo given he was running fourth with a KTM ridden by Binder catching up. The Frenchman braked as deep as he dared at Turn 1 at the start of Lap 18 to try and keep the South African behind him, but ran wide and was picked off by Binder at Turn 2.
Binder on the rise but Rins creeps clear
Meanwhile, Miguel Oliveira (Red Bull KTM Factory Racing) was also through on Bagnaia, and soon Luca Marini (Mooney VR46 Racing Team) was as well. Enea Bastianini (Gresini Racing MotoGP™) then caught up to his future teammate and while he might have had thoughts about the Ducati hierarchy watching on in the garage, Pecco left a humongous gap at Turn 2 on Lap 22 to give ninth position to ‘La Bestia’ and save himself any possible trouble.
It was more dramatic in the battle for the podium places, with Binder going past his own future teammate, Miller, on Lap 23 at Turn 2, then setting after Martin. Halfway around the lap at Turn 11, Miller’s last race with Ducati came to a premature end when he crashed out, handing over fourth spot to Quartararo again.
Bagnaia is the Champion
Rins had not quite been able to drop the field like he might have hoped, but was still nine tenths of a second to the good when Binder overtook Martin for second place at Turn 4 on the penultimate lap. They would take the chequered flag 0.396 seconds apart as Rins delivered the final win for Suzuki in its current stint in MotoGP™, with Martin getting home just over a second from victory, and Quartararo nine tenths further back.
Oliveira would pass Mir for fifth, with the 2020 World Champion therefore classified sixth, ahead of Marini and Bastianini. Bagnaia found himself under pressure from Quartararo’s Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP™ teammate Franco Morbidelli in the final laps but beat the Italian to ninth position. Marco Bezzecchi (Mooney VR46 Racing Team) finished 11th, ahead of Tech3 KTM Factory Racing duo Raul Fernandez and Remy Gardner, then Takaaki Nakagami (LCR Honda Idemitsu) in 14th and Fabio Di Giannantonio (Gresini Racing MotoGP™) in the last points-paying position. Joining Miller on the list of retirements was Johann Zarco (Prima Pramac Racing) after a crash on Lap 16, plus both the Aprilia Racing entries of Aleix Espargaro and Maverick Viñales, both the Repsol Honda Team entries of Marquez and Pol Espargaro, and also Darryn Binder (WithU Yamaha RNF MotoGP™ Team).
Bagnaia can now celebrate his first MotoGP™ Championship crown, and Ducati’s first riders’ title in 15 long years, but before the off-season, we have the Valencia Test back at the Circuit Ricardo Tormo on Tuesday.
MotoGP™ Race Top 10
1. Alex Rins (Team Suzuki Ecstar) 2. Brad Binder (Red Bull KTM Factory Racing) + 0.396 3. Jorge Martin (Prima Pramac Racing) + 1.059 4. Fabio Quartararo (Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP™) + 1.911 5. Miguel Oliveira (Red Bull KTM Factory Racing) + 7.122 6. Joan Mir (Team Suzuki Ecstar) + 7.735 7. Luca Marini (Mooney VR46 Racing Team) + 8.524 8. Enea Bastianini (Gresini Racing MotoGP™) + 12.038 9. Francesco Bagnaia (Ducati Lenovo Team) + 14.441 10. Franco Morbidelli (Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP™) + 14.676
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2022, however, began on the back foot. A crash in Qatar, a tough race in Lombok, two fifths and an eighth signalled an unexpected start to the season, but Jerez saw the number 63 back on top in a race-long chess match with Quartararo. Then came another crash, at Le Mans, and then another win at Mugello as the Italian took the spoils on home turf. But the rollercoaster went down again as bad luck saw him take home a zero in Barcelona and a mistake caused the same at the Sachsenring. Then, Bagnaia was 91 points behind points leader Quartararo, the biggest deficit overcome to date.
– Bagnaia becomes the first Italian to clinch a premier class title since Valentino Rossi in 2009. Overall, he is the seventh Italian rider to do so along with Giacomo Agostini (8 times), Valentino Rossi (7), Umberto Masetti (2), Libero Liberati (1), Marco Lucchinelli (1) and Franco Uncini (1).
Fernandez won the European Junior Cup in 2014 and competed in Superstock 600 thereafter, where he achieved a victory in 2015. He was fifth in the Moto2™ European Championship the following year as he moved onto new machinery, and he started the next season with a podium. That year, 2017, also saw Fernandez called up to make his Grand Prix debut at the 2017 Italian GP with Speed Up.
After a hard-fought campaign, Augusto Fernandez has been crowned Moto2™ World Champion following his P2 finish at the Valencia GP. The Red Bull KTM Ajo star defeated title rival Ai Ogura (Idemitsu Honda Team Asia), who crashed out of contention, at Circuit Ricardo Tormo to take glory in the intermediate class, signing off in style as he makes the move to MotoGP™ in 2023. In celebration of the Spaniard, here are some of the key stats behind his career to date!
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