2020 MotoGP Round Seven – Misano
Gran Premio Lenovo di San Marino e della Riviera di Rimini
Misano MotoGP Sunday Stats Guide
Maverick Viñales has qualified on pole position for the second time this season along with Austria. This is Viñales’ 11th pole in the premier class (his third in Misano), one less than Johnny Cecotto.
This is the second successive Yamaha pole position at Misano (also with Viñales last year) and their seventh pole position since the track returned to the Grand Prix calendar in 2007.
Since 2007, only three riders have won the MotoGP race after qualifying on pole position in Misano: Casey Stoner (2007), Valentino Rossi (2009) and Dani Pedrosa (2010), with only Rossi riding a Yamaha.
Franco Morbidelli has qualified in second, equalling his best qualifying result since he stepped to MotoGP in 2018, along with Spain and Japan in 2019.
Fabio Quartararo has qualified third for his 18th front row start in MotoGP. On his 17 previous front rows, he went on to finish on the podium nine times, including two wins.
Valentino Rossi, who is the most successful rider on the current MotoGP grid at Misano with three wins, heads Row 2. This is his best qualifying here since he was second in 2016, when he also finished second for his most recent podium in Misano. He equals his best qualifying of the season so far from Andalucia.
With Maverick Viñales, Franco Morbidelli, Fabio Quartararo and Valentino Rossi, this is the first time there are four Yamaha riders within the top four on the grid in the premier class since the 1988 Portuguese GP held in Jerez with Eddie Lawson, Wayne Rainey, Kevin Magee and Christian Sarron.
Jack Miller, who is the only rider who finished on the podium in the last two races, has qualified in fifth place for the second successive time (although he started from fourth in Styria), as the top Ducati rider. He will be aiming to take three successive podiums for the first time since 2014 in Moto3.
Francesco Bagnaia, who missed the last three races due to injury, has qualified sixth for the third time this year, along with Spain and Andalucia. He crashed out last year at Misano.
Alex Rins has qualified seventh for the second successive time (although he started from sixth in Styria) which are his best qualifying results since he was also seventh in Malaysia last year.
He and team-mate Joan Mir in eighth will be aiming to become the first Suzuki riders to stand on the podium at Misano since Chris Vermeulen and John Hopkins in 2007, which is also the only time so far that two Suzuki riders were on the podium in the MotoGP era.
Andrea Dovizioso, who has been on the podium at Misano twice in MotoGP including a win in 2018 (the last win for Ducati at the track to date), has qualified ninth. It’s the fifth time this year he has failed to qualify on the front two rows of the grid.
Takaaki Nakagami has qualified in 14th as the highest-placed Honda rider. This is the first time there is no Honda rider within the top 12 on the grid since Honda came back to the premier class of GP racing in 1982 (excluding the 1982 French GP, which was boycotted due to safety concerns).
2020 MotoGP Misano Qualifying Quotes
Maverick Vinales – P1
“I‘m really happy because that lap was amazing! Not just because it gave me pole position, but more so because of the time itself. When I saw 1‘31.4s I thought “This is a good lap time!”. We knew our potential and took everything we had, and we made a really good lap. Honestly, I‘m quite happy and impressed that at the end of the day we were so fast. Breaking the lap record was really hard for me. This morning we were still riding 1‘31.9s. We weren‘t completely sure what we would be able to do in the afternoon, but I felt so good, especially in FP4 on the hard tyre. For tomorrow, we don‘t know what will happen, but today and also on Friday we were strong, so tomorrow we are going to try to be strong again. I will push from the beginning. For sure, the race will be very long and tough, so we‘re going to try to be smart, and then we‘ll see what we can do.”
Franco Morbidelli – P2
“I am very happy: I was trying to make a good qualifying lap and I achieved it! At the finish line I was looking at the big screen, saw myself in first and I was hoping it would be my first pole position, and at my home GP. But unfortunately Maverick was faster. Second position is still an important spot to start tomorrow’s race from in order to have a good race. I have the chance tomorrow of taking my first MotoGP win and I will be trying to stay in the mix and see what happens. I’m feeling strong, but all the Yamahas are strong here, so I think there is still a little bit I need to improve. I’m ready to fight though.”
Fabio Quartararo – P3
“It is good to be back on the front row, but today has been a bit strange. It’s like last year: we were super fast in FP3 but struggled with the front end in qualifying. I am pushing a lot and am on the limit but it wasn’t enough. The most important thing, of course, is the 27-lap race. I’m feeling positive because we have the pace for victory, so let’s see what happens. I’m really looking forward to it though, really confident, because we have the pace again. I think it could be a good fight tomorrow as all of us at the front have the same bike; it could make it very interesting. I’m hoping for a great battle.”
Valentino Rossi – P4
“My day was good. This morning was fantastic for me, because to finish FP3 in P1 is always a great feeling in Misano. Also, I had a good pace, and I felt good with the bike. Here at this track the Yamaha is very competitive, very strong. We need to come back at the top, to fight for top positions, because the two weekends in Austria were very difficult to manage. This afternoon we tried some different things. I was not fantastic, and everybody has big doubts about the tyres, both front and rear, because the choice is very open. So, we have to see, we have to fix some things. It‘s a shame about the front row, but starting from the fourth position is still good, and our pace is not so bad. It looks like the Yamahas have a very good pace. The battle will be hard as always, because especially Maverick, but also Quartararo and Franco, have been riding very well since Friday morning, so I think that we will have to start well, have to improve for tomorrow and try to fight for the podium.”
Jack Miller – P5
“Not a bad day, I was fast since this morning, during the FP3 I had a small crashed but I’m ok. I did a decent lap on the qualifying and tomorrow I will start from the second row, so I’m happy, I did my best and tried to be fast as possible. I’m confident for tomorrow and we will do our best like always.”
Pecco Bagnaia – P6
“I’m happy for today. My goal was the top 10 and tomorrow I will start from the second row and this is an important step for us. Yesterday I didn’t push at my maximum to understand my feeling, instead today I just thought about riding and I focused on it, carefree about my leg I’m confident for tomorrow, the only question will be the 26 laps of the race, because these days I never did a long run, but I’m feel ready.”
Alex Rins – P7
“I had good feelings today, better than yesterday, and I’m happy to start on the third row. I did my best lap during qualifying and I improved quite a lot during today, also my race pace is pretty strong. I think the race will be quite complex and it will be important to gain a good position in the early laps in order to fight later in the race.”
Joan Mir – P8
“We already knew that our fast lap wasn’t quite as good as the other guys, but we worked really hard and made some improvements which have helped, and in the end the grid position is OK. Another positive thing is that my race pace in FP4 was good with used tyres, so that gives me confidence. Tomorrow morning I will work a little bit more on getting the bike stopped, and let’s see what I can do in the race, the Yamaha riders will be hard to beat but I feel I can be competitive.”
Andrea Dovizioso – P9
“I’m happy because we were finally able to improve my feeling with the bike and today we got closer to the front riders. Unfortunately, we couldn’t do better than the ninth place in qualifying; our goal today was to finish at least in the second row because here in Misano the start is short and quite narrow. Now we will try to take another step forward in tomorrow morning’s warm-up. The goal for the race tomorrow will be fighting in the top five positions.”
Johann Zarco – P10
“I want to be on the top 6, because be on the two first rows are very important for the race, but I had a freaky afternoon. During the FP4, first I had a technic problem, and then I had a crash ant it was a problem because this was the bike with I had to do the qualifying. The team did an amazing job because they change a lot of things in a short time and the bike was ready to the qualifying. It was very import because a top10 is better than a last position. I think I could be fighting for the top8 with the group in tomorrow’s race.”
Pol Espargaro – P11
“The same thing: when you know you have to go to Q1 then you don’t have any tyres for Q2. I was in Q2 with a used Front, with nine laps on it already, and a new rear. I was coming around for a similar fast lap-time for the second row but I lost the front. Our problem started in FP3 where I made a mistake. It’s been a little tougher than usual to focus this weekend so far and it cost me to go to the Q2. We would have been on the second row with our Q1 lap-time but it didn’t happen again. We’ll try again tomorrow.”
Miguel Oliveira – P12
“It was a good day of work today. We didn’t manage to do a decent time attack in FP3, so we had to go through Q1. We got through, which was nice. Then in Qualifying 2, I had only one soft tire, so I waited until the end to go out. I pushed, did my two good laps, which were close to my personal best, but not enough to be closer to the front, at least in the second or third row. The race is tomorrow, anyway, so hopefully we can have a good start to fight for the top positions.”
Aleix Espargaro – P13
“I am pleased, although the final position leaves somewhat of a bitter taste in my mouth. We improved a lot, but I missed the top 10 in FP3 by a hair and, despite a great time, I didn’t go through in Q1. I’m comforted by the fact that the truly important positions are only a couple of tenths away and that tells me that the RS-GP is a top-level project. Tomorrow will be a strange race. We’ll see all the different tyre options on the track, I think for the first time. I am happy with my pace. It seems like it is good for something more than the top 10, but we also need to consider the difficulty overtaking.”
Takaaki Nakagami – P14
“We’re still not really competitive and the weekend has been a bit of a struggle so far. The lap times are so tight, I just missed the top 10 in FP3 this morning and we lost a lot of time yesterday on the set-up of the bike. But in FP3 today we definitely improved the bike, it was much more consistent. In Q1 I missed out by two tenths, but we did our best, of course. The lap times are so tight, so we’ll just forget today and will try to take another step tomorrow. It will be difficult in the race because we’re not in a good position on the starting grid, but 27 laps will be a long race and you never know about tyre life, so we have a chance. We’ll do our best and something around the top eight will be good.”
Danilo Petrucci – P15
“Definitely this was not the position I expected to get today in qualifying. The gaps are always very narrow, but unfortunately, I failed to set a good lap time. In the second lap available with the new tyre, I made several mistakes that didn’t allow me to improve. My pace for the race is more consistent, but it will be crucial to be able to start well to be able to stay hooked immediately to the front and have the chance to get a good result.”
Brad Binder – P16
“Difficult day today. We tried a lot with the set-up and found some things that improved the feeling but in some areas we did not quite get everything together as I would have like for qualifying. The good thing is that I have a very clear idea of what I want tomorrow. I think we can try it in Warm-up. It wasn’t a great qualifying but I know we can be better in the race for sure.”
Tito Rabat – P17
“It was a good day, in FP4 I really enjoyed myself, I understood things about the bike. In qualifying, in the second start, I was overconfident with the rear wheel. I think it’s not a problem with the tire, but if we find the solution it will help me to have feeling in the first laps of the race and to have a good race”.
Iker Lecuona – P18
“Today has been a really difficult day for me. In FP3 I started with used tires and did a long run to check the pace for the race. This pleased me a lot because I managed to go fast with used tires. Later when I wanted to push for a lap time in order to go direct to a Q2 spot, I crashed and then I went out with the second bike but I couldn’t do anything to improve. In Qualifying, I felt good with the bike. I pushed a lot, therefore I don’t understand, why the lap time was just not coming. I need to check the data to understand this. The important day is tomorrow. I have a good pace for the race, so I stay optimistic.”
Stefan Bradl – P19
“We tried a lot of different things today in order to improve our feeling and speed. There’s still something to find for the race and the bike is very physical here, especially with the bumps. Hopefully we can get some early overtakes in and then ride with the others to see where they are stronger and what advantage we can take.”
Bradley Smith – P20
“If we look at yesterday’s performance, the situation is obviously frustrating. As is often the case, the reality is a compromise. We worked well on race pace and I’m rather pleased with that in terms of our expectations. I was lacking a few tenths on the flying lap to do better in qualifying. Thanks in part to the data we’ve collected, we have reached a good base, but then sorting the final details gets more complicated. We’ll try a couple of ideas tomorrow in warmup.”
Alex Marquez – P21
“It was not an easy qualifying for us, we knew coming into this weekend that it would be tough. We got some good information in FP4 and our overall pace is better than the position on the time sheet shows. In qualifying I wasn’t able to put together a good lap, my fastest lap did not have any of my best sector times. It’s quite difficult with the bumps. The good point is that tomorrow can only improve.”
Cal Crutchlow – Declared unfit
“After yesterday I actually felt quite good riding the bike, I had no particular pain in my arm. But unfortunately the arm was swollen after riding and the fluid build-up was a lot after the session so the doctors reviewed it this morning and declared me unfit to ride, with the reason being the risk of infection with the hole being open in my arm. You can see the muscle and touch the muscle through it and the fluid build-up is not coming out, we don’t want to start draining the arm all the time because I’ll be draining it all day. So along with Alberto (Puig) and Lucio (Cecchinello) the decision was made and I think the correct decision to rest and try to see whether we can come back in Barcelona in two weeks’ time.”
MotoGP Qualifying Results
Pos | Rider | Bike | Q | Time/Gap |
1 | Maverick VIÑALES | YAMAHA | Q2 | 1m31.411 |
2 | Franco MORBIDELLI | YAMAHA | Q2 | +0.312 |
3 | Fabio QUARTARARO | YAMAHA | Q2 | +0.380 |
4 | Valentino ROSSI | YAMAHA | Q2 | +0.466 |
5 | Jack MILLER | DUCATI | Q2 | +0.641 |
6 | Francesco BAGNAIA | DUCATI | Q2 | +0.643 |
7 | Alex RINS | SUZUKI | Q2 | +0.679 |
8 | Joan MIR | SUZUKI | Q2 | +0.691 |
9 | Andrea DOVIZIOSO | DUCATI | Q2 | +0.773 |
10 | Johann ZARCO | DUCATI | Q2 | +0.807 |
11 | Pol ESPARGARO | KTM | Q2 | +0.855 |
12 | Miguel OLIVEIRA | KTM | Q2 | +0.912 |
13 | Aleix ESPARGARO | APRILIA | Q1 | (*) 0.231 |
14 | Takaaki NAKAGAMI | HONDA | Q1 | (*) 0.318 |
15 | Danilo PETRUCCI | DUCATI | Q1 | (*) 0.354 |
16 | Brad BINDER | KTM | Q1 | (*) 0.470 |
17 | Tito RABAT | DUCATI | Q1 | (*) 0.727 |
18 | Iker LECUONA | KTM | Q1 | (*) 0.774 |
19 | Stefan BRADL | HONDA | Q1 | (*) 0.851 |
20 | Bradley SMITH | APRILIA | Q1 | (*) 1.102 |
21 | Alex MARQUEZ | HONDA | Q1 | (*) 1.269 |
22 | Cal CRUTCHLOW | HONDA | FP1 | 1.340 |
MotoGP Qualifying Report
It was a truly spectacular second pole position of the season for Maverick Viñales (Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP) thanks to a new Misano World Circuit Marco Simoncelli lap record on Saturday, with the Spaniard’s 1:31.411 putting him ahead of second-placed Franco Morbidelli (Petronas Yamaha SRT) by 0.312. Third place went to World Championship leader Fabio Quartararo (Petronas Yamaha SRT)… and fourth place went the way of home hero Valentino Rossi (Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP) – making i the first time they’ve finished 1-2-3-4 in qualifying in the MotoGP era!
Viñales was the first rider to set a flying lap time in the second qualifying session, and a 1:32.130 was a solid opening time… but it was going to be beaten. Alex Rins (Team Suzuki Ecstar) was sat behind Viñales on the first lap but the Spaniard ran on at the end of the back straight, before Q1’s fastest rider Pol Espagraro (Red Bull KTM Factory Racing) crashed at Turn 15. That brought out the yellow flags which saw Quartararo have to sit up and scrap the lap, but the Frenchman was getting the hammer down on his second time around…
Another rider to be getting the hammer down was Free Practice pacesetter Rossi. The Doctor was further down the road from Quartararo and sure enough, the nine-time World Champion went provisional P1 to send the 10,000 Misano fans wild. However, Quartararo would soon demote Rossi to second with a 1:31.791, with the riders then pitting to push some fresh tyres in.
By this time, Viñales had slipped to P5 and was out on his lonesome on his second run. A personal best saw him stay fifth, before a faster lap then came in for the number 12. It was provisional pole, but only just – with the gap a tiny 0.004 as he then pitted again in a two-stop strategy. With the other riders back out for their second runs, Quartararo couldn’t improve his lap time on his first attempt, 0.038 the Frenchman’s deficit, as second fastest in Q1 Miguel Oliveira (Red Bull KTM Tech3) and Andrea Dovizioso (Ducati Team) quickly exchanging P6.
Rossi was then bang on the money but after losing two tenths in Sector 2, the Italian backed out of his lap. Compatriot Morbidelli and his team-mate Quartararo were then lighting the timesheets up in the first and second sectors, as Jack Miller (Pramac Racing) slotted himself into P6. Coming round the final sector, Morbidelli placed himself onto a dream provisional home Grand Prix pole position, and Quartararo unable to improve on his last flying lap. Was that it? Not quite…
Viñales was two-tenths under Morbidelli’s time as an absolute stunner started coming in from Top Gun. Nailing the final half of the lap to take the chequered flag with a new Misano lap record, and taking that accolade away from Yamaha test rider Jorge Lorenzo, Viñales’ time gave him plenty of clear air ahead of Morbidelli. The Italian is therefore forced to settle for a sterling second on home soil, but it’s his best qualifying result of the season.
Quartararo completes the front row, 0.380 adrift from Viñales. The 21-year-old didn’t sound too disheartened with P3 though, he’s looking strong to challenge for his third win of the season from the outside of the front row. Rossi spearheads Row 2 in P4, and that’s the number 46’s equal best Saturday afternoon result of 2020. Joining Rossi on the second row is Miller who improved on his last lap to get the better of injured teammate Francesco Bagnaia (Pramac Racing), but both Pramac riders had an upbeat qualifying in San Marino.
Rins is the leading Suzuki in P7, the Spaniard beating teammate Joan Mir by 0.012 in Q2 and the latter – like Miller – leaping up the leaderboard on his last lap. Dovizioso, the man second in the Championship, will have to start from P9 but race day is another day – as we’ve seen a good few times from the number 04. Johann Zarco (Esponsorama Racing) completed the top 10, while Pol Espargaro managed to get out on his second bike after his crash and finish less than a tenth ahead of Oliveira – the Q1 graduates ending Q2 in P11 and P12.
Yamaha are back! After two tougher rounds, no one could get within a tenth and a half of the YZR-M1s in qualifying, with polesitter Viñales really laying down the gauntlet ahead of Sunday’s crucial battle. Can anyone stop the Iwata onslaught in San Marino, and if not, who comes out on top in the Yamaha dogfight?!
Moto2 Qualifying Report
Sam Lowes (EG 0,0 Marc VDS) was the class of the field in Q2 at the Gran Premio Lenovo di San Marino e della Riviera di Rimini, taking pole position by over two and a half tenths and smashing the lap record in the process. However, the Brit will start from pitlane on Sunday due to a penalty, promoting second-placed Remy Gardner (ONEXOX TKKR SAG Team) to first on the grid. The third quickest man in Q2 was Championship leader Luca Marini (Sky Racing Team VR46), so he’ll start second.
Q1 at Misano saw one surprise as impressive 2020 rookie Aron Canet (Oceanica Aspar Team Moto2) struggled to move through, and he’ll be on the fight back on Sunday. Heading the session though was a turnaround of fortunes for last year’s near-winner Fabio Di Giannantonio (+Ego Speed Up), the Italian moving through to the fight for pole alongside Hector Garzo (Flexbox HP 40), Joe Roberts (Tennor American Racing Team) and teammate Marcos Ramirez.
The opening flying laps in Q2 saw former lap record holder Bezzecchi sit top of the pile, before Enea Bastianini (Italtrans Racing Team) took provisional pole. However, Lowes was flying and the British rider set a devilishly quick 1:36.666 to take charge, with Bezzecchi improving his time but slotting into second. Then, Lowes was going even faster – a lot faster at that. The number 22 came across the line to break the Misano World Circuit Marco Simoncelli lap record, and no one would threaten it.
Gardner was the man closest as he shot up from nowhere into second, set to start first, with Marini slotting into third on the timesheets and therefore the first of the top Championship challengers on the grid. Fourth in the session but joining the two on the front row will be Marco Bezzecchi (Sky Racing Team VR46), who went down at the final corner – thankfully unhurt – but lost his chance to improve…
Second in the Championship, Enea Bastianini (Italtrans Racing Team) will spearhead the second row, fresh from a Ducati MotoGP signature, and the Italian is set to take the battle to Marini and Bezzecchi as the Moto2 title fight looks set to heat up in Misano. Xavi Vierge’s (Petronas Sprinta Racing) sixth place in qualifying will see him start from fifth, his best qualifying result of the season and his best since the 2019 Malaysian GP., with Marcel Schrötter (Liqui Moly Intact GP) just over half a second away from Lowes in P7. The German will join Bastianini and Vierge on the second row.
2019 winner Augusto Fernandez was forced to settle for eighth in Q2, six tenths shy of his teammate’s time, the Spaniard heading Tetsuta Nagashima (Red Bull KTM Ajo) and Q1 graduate Fabio Di Giannantonio, who took P9 and P10 respectively. They will therefore complete the third row.
A first pole in four years for Lowes unfortunately won’t see the number 22 line-up at the front of the grid, but the stage is set for a classic.
Sam Lowes – P1
“For me this year since, well after Qatar, I’ve been strong and felt quite good, even in Austria at a difficult track for me, I was still quick. But we have to start from pitlane tomorrow. This is racing, sometimes you have things like this but I’m happy to come here this weekend, get pole and have good pace. Hopefully we can still score some points in the race.”
Moto2 Qualifying Results
Pos | Rider | Bike | Q | Time/Gap |
1 | Sam LOWES | KALEX | Q2 | 1m36.170 |
2 | Remy GARDNER | KALEX | Q2 | +0.254 |
3 | Luca MARINI | KALEX | Q2 | +0.326 |
4 | Marco BEZZECCHI | KALEX | Q2 | +0.371 |
5 | Enea BASTIANINI | KALEX | Q2 | +0.444 |
6 | Xavi VIERGE | KALEX | Q2 | +0.493 |
7 | Marcel SCHROTTER | KALEX | Q2 | +0.525 |
8 | Augusto FERNANDEZ | KALEX | Q2 | +0.658 |
9 | Tetsuta NAGASHIMA | KALEX | Q2 | +0.848 |
10 | Fabio DI GIANNANTONI ITA | SPEED UP | Q2 | +0.849 |
11 | Marcos RAMIREZ | KALEX | Q2 | +0.913 |
12 | Thomas LUTHI | KALEX | Q2 | +0.915 |
13 | Jorge NAVARRO | SPEED UP | Q2 | +0.919 |
14 | Hafizh SYAHRIN | SPEED UP | Q2 | +0.936 |
15 | Hector GARZO | KALEX | Q2 | +1.158 |
16 | Lorenzo DALLA PORTA ITA | KALEX | Q2 | +1.255 |
17 | Jake DIXON | KALEX | Q2 | +1.265 |
18 | Joe ROBERTS | KALEX | Q2 | +1.496 |
19 | Nicolò BULEGA | KALEX | Q1 | (*) 0.129 |
20 | Lorenzo BALDASSARRI | KALEX | Q1 | (*) 0.130 |
21 | Stefano MANZI | MV AGUSTA | Q1 | (*) 0.311 |
22 | Aron CANET | SPEED UP | Q1 | (*) 0.383 |
23 | Simone CORSI | MV AGUSTA | Q1 | (*) 0.492 |
24 | Somkiat CHANTRA | KALEX | Q1 | (*) 0.509 |
25 | Kasma DANIEL | KALEX | Q1 | (*) 0.762 |
26 | Bo BENDSNEYDER | NTS | Q1 | (*) 0.862 |
27 | Andi Farid IZDIHAR | KALEX | Q1 | (*) 1.409 |
28 | Edgar PONS | KALEX | Q1 | (*) 2.434 |
29 | Jesko RAFFIN | NTS | Q1 | (*) 3.304 |
Moto3
Ai Ogura (Honda Team Asia) took his maiden pole position on Saturday at the Gran Premio Lenovo di San Marino e della Riviera di Rimini, snatching the honour from Gabriel Rodrigo (Kömmerling Gresini Moto3) by just 0.016 in another tight qualifying session for Moto3. 2019 winner Tatsuki Suzuki (SIC58 Squadra Corse) completes the front row by an even smaller margin – with the top three covered by just 0.031 at Misano World Circuit Marco Simoncelli.
The fight to move through and take part in the fight for pole set the tone, with Tony Arbolino (Rivacold Snipers Team) coming out on top by less than a tenth to move through alongside Sterilgarda Max Racing Team’s Romano Fenati and Alonso Lopez, with BOE Skull Rider Facile Energy’s Ricardo Rossi the last graduate in a last minute shuffle.
In Q2 itself, the last minute dash was again the name of the game. It looked set to be another pole for Rodrigo as the flag flew, and Ogura’s laptime hadn’t initially looked like it would put him in the mix to challenge… but then came the final sector. Putting it together perfectly, the Japanese rider shot over the line and just snatched his maiden pole position.
Rodrigo was then forced to settle for second but has a nice clear view to Turn 1 on Sunday, with last year’s winner Suzuki setting himself up well for race day too in third. Andrea Migno (Sky Racing Team VR46) heads up Row 2 just behind them in a solid qualifying session, but the Italian will rue the tiny margin that kept him off the front row: 0.011.
Fenati put in Husqvarna’s best qualifying result since their return to the class this season as he lines up fifth, with Raul Fernandez (Red Bull KTM Ajo) completing the third row. Row 3 is headed by Styria winner Celestino Vietti (Sky Racing Team VR46), with the Italian joined by Jeremy Alcoba (Kömmerling Gresini Moto3) and Tony Arbolino (Rivacold Snipers Team). Filip Salač (Rivacold Snipers Team) completes the top ten.
That leaves a couple of high profile names missing… Championship leader Albert Arenas (Pull&Bear Aspar Team) will start 13th as he attempts to stop Ogura gaining on him, and third overall John McPhee (Petronas Sprinta Racing) suffered a crash early in Q2 and then ended up P17. Can they move back through to take the fight to Ogura?
Moto3 Qualifying Results
Pos | Rider | Bike | Q | Time/Gap |
1 | Ai OGURA | HONDA | Q2 | 1m42.403 |
2 | Gabriel RODRIGO | HONDA | Q2 | +0.016 |
3 | Tatsuki SUZUKI | HONDA | Q2 | +0.031 |
4 | Andrea MIGNO | KTM | Q2 | +0.042 |
5 | Romano FENATI | HUSQVARNA | Q2 | +0.201 |
6 | Raul FERNANDEZ | KTM | Q2 | +0.253 |
7 | Celestino VIETTI | KTM | Q2 | +0.378 |
8 | Jeremy ALCOBA | HONDA | Q2 | +0.405 |
9 | Tony ARBOLINO | HONDA | Q2 | +0.462 |
10 | Filip SALAC | HONDA | Q2 | +0.505 |
11 | Sergio GARCIA | HONDA | Q2 | +0.591 |
12 | Riccardo ROSSI | KTM | Q2 | +0.604 |
13 | Albert ARENAS | KTM | Q2 | +0.651 |
14 | Jaume MASIA | HONDA | Q2 | +0.688 |
15 | Dennis FOGGIA | HONDA | Q2 | +0.712 |
16 | Stefano NEPA | KTM | Q2 | +0.795 |
17 | John MCPHEE | HONDA | Q2 | +0.924 |
18 | Alonso LOPEZ | HUSQVARNA | Q2 | +1.315 |
19 | Darryn BINDER | KTM | Q1 | (*) 0.776 |
20 | Niccolò ANTONELLI | HONDA | Q1 | (*) 0.871 |
21 | Ayumu SASAKI | KTM | Q1 | (*) 1.040 |
22 | Carlos TATAY | KTM | Q1 | (*) 1.064 |
23 | Davide PIZZOLI | KTM | Q1 | (*) 1.112 |
24 | Khairul Idham PAWI | HONDA | Q1 | (*) 1.358 |
25 | Kaito TOBA | KTM | Q1 | (*) 1.374 |
26 | Jason DUPASQUIER | KTM | Q1 | (*) 1.473 |
27 | Ryusei YAMANAKA | HONDA | Q1 | (*) 1.539 |
28 | Deniz ÖNCÜ | KTM | Q1 | (*) 1.542 |
29 | Barry BALTUS | KTM | Q1 | (*) 1.578 |
30 | Yuki KUNII | HONDA | Q1 | (*) 1.914 |
31 | Maximilian KOFLER | KTM | Q1 | (*) 2.081 |
MotoE
There was a lot to smile about for some of the home heroes after FIM Enel MotoE World Cup E-Pole at the Gran Premio Lenovo di San Marino e della Riviera di Rimini, with Matteo Ferrari (Trentino Gresini MotoE) taking his very first E-Pole after snatching the honour from compatriot Mattia Casadei (Ongetta SIC58 Squadra Corse). The 2019 Cup winner and Misano victor won’t start from the front, however, with Casadei promoted to P1 as Ferrari serves a three-place grid penalty for his crash with Eric Granado (Avintia Esponsorama Racing) in Jerez. Third fastest in E-Pole was Xavier Simeon (LCR E-Team) as he pipped rookie Lukas Tulovic (Tech 3 E-Racing), but the German will move up to start alongside the Belgian on the front row.
The story of the day – as well as the polesetter, front row and penalty on the way – was a difficult E-Pole for Eric Granado as the Brazilian ran afoul of track limits and had his lap cancelled. He’ll therefore start from the back, and will be one to watch as he tries to move forward in the short dash of a MotoE race that awaits.
That drama came late as the runners headed out in the order set by their Free Practice times – with the fastest going last – creating plenty of stories throughout the field. Dominique Aegerter (Dynavolt Intact GP) wasn’t quite able to replicate his Jerez form, last year’s E-Pole winner Alex de Angelis (Octo Pramac MotoE) had a few big moments on his lap, and injury comeback kid Niki Tuuli (Avant Ajo MotoE) showed some solid signs before losing his advantage in the final sector . On Sunday, then, we can expect another incredible spectacle…
Behind the Casadei, Simeon, Tulovic front row, Ferrari will start fourth with Aegerter alongside him. Niccolo Canepa (LCR E-Team) completes that second row after a solid performance from the Italian on Saturday; the number 7 just hundredths off the Swiss rider ahead of him on the timesheets. Rookie and second in the Cup standings Jordi Torres (Pons Racing 40) heads the third row, ahead of a big leap forward for Tommaso Marcon (Tech 3 E-Racing) at Misano as he regains full fitness. The gap between the two was only 0.007!
Mike Di Meglio (EG 0,0 Marc VDS) took P9 as he looks for more in 2020, ahead of home hero Alessando Zaccone (Trentino Gresini MotoE), who completes the top ten. The Italian denied Tuuli the honour by just 0.010.
Keep an eye on those a little further back, too. After a dramatic start to his lap losing him time, Sammarinese rider de Angelis finds himself languishing in 16th and looking to move forward, and that couldn’t be more true for Granado either. Australian Josh Hook will start from 15th place on the grid.
MotoE Qualifying Results
Pos | Rider | Bike | Time/Gap |
1 | Matteo FERRARI | Energica | 1m43.580 |
2 | Mattia CASADEI | Energica | +0.272 |
3 | Xavier SIMEON | Energica | +0.372 |
4 | Lukas TULOVIC | Energica | +0.447 |
5 | Dominique AEGERTER | Energica | +0.626 |
6 | Niccolo CANEPA | Energica | +0.641 |
7 | Jordi TORRES | Energica | +0.682 |
8 | Tommaso MARCON | Energica | +0.689 |
9 | Mike DI MEGLIO | Energica | +0.772 |
10 | Alessandro ZACCONE | Energica | +1.107 |
11 | Niki TUULI | Energica | +1.117 |
12 | Alejandro MEDINA | Energica | +1.174 |
13 | Xavi CARDELUS | Energica | +1.267 |
14 | Maria HERRERA | Energica | +1.428 |
15 | Josh HOOK | Energica | +1.582 |
16 | Alex DE ANGELIS | Energica | +1.681 |
17 | Jakub KORNFEIL | Energica | +2.173 |
MotoGP World Championship Points
Pos |
Rider | Bike | Points |
1 | Fabio QUARTARARO | Yamaha | 70 |
2 | Andrea DOVIZIOSO | Ducati | 67 |
3 | Jack MILLER | Ducati | 56 |
4 | Brad BINDER | KTM | 49 |
5 | Maverick VIÑALES | Yamaha | 48 |
6 | Takaaki NAKAGAMI | Honda | 46 |
7 | Valentino ROSSI | Yamaha | 45 |
8 | Joan MIR | Suzuki | 44 |
9 | Miguel OLIVEIRA | KTM | 43 |
10 | Pol ESPARGARO | KTM | 35 |
11 | Franco MORBIDELLI | Yamaha | 32 |
12 | Johann ZARCO | Ducati | 30 |
13 | Alex RINS | Suzuki | 29 |
14 | Danilo PETRUCCI | Ducati | 25 |
15 | Alex MARQUEZ | Honda | 15 |
16 | Aleix ESPARGARO | Aprilia | 15 |
17 | Iker LECUONA | KTM | 13 |
18 | Francesco BAGNAIA | Ducati | 9 |
19 | Bradley SMITH | Aprilia | 8 |
20 | Tito RABAT | Ducati | 7 |
21 | Cal CRUTCHLOW | Honda | 7 |
22 | Michele PIRRO | Ducati | 4 |
23 | Stefan BRADL | Honda | 0 |
2020 MotoGP Calendar
Rnd | Date | Circuit |
4 | ||
5 | ||
6 | ||
7 | 13 September | Misano World Circuit Marco Simoncelli |
8 | 20 September | Misano World Circuit Marco Simoncelli |
9 | 27 September | Barcelona – Catalunya |
10 | 11 October | Le Mans |
11 | 18 October | MotorLand Aragón |
12 | 25 October | MotorLand Aragón |
13 | 08 November | Comunitat Valenciana-Ricardo Tormo |
14 | 15 November | Comunitat Valenciana-Ricardo Tormo |
15 | 22 November | Autodromo Internacional do Algarve |
Gran Premio Lenovo di San Marino e della Riviera di Rimini Schedule
Time | Class | Session |
1620 | Moto3 | WUP |
1650 | Moto2 | WUP |
1720 | MotoGP | WUP |
1805 | MotoE | WUP |
1900 | Moto3 | RACE |
2020 | Moto2 | RACE |
2200 | MotoGP | RACE |
Source: MCNews.com.au