MotoGP 2022 – Round Nine
Catalunya with Boris
If the last few races did not convince you anything is possible in MotoGP, then how about now? Surely you don’t need any more convincing to understand why this is the greatest sport on earth?
In the endless war between Spain and Italy that is the MotoGP, Catalunya is an old and fabled battleground. And none of the battles is more fabled than the one which saw Rossi beat Lorenzo on the last corner of the last lap in 2009. I still play that video from time to time because it is spectacular and always worth another look. And I enjoy seeing Jorge eat shit.
Last Sunday, another battle took place at the Circuit de Barcelona, and it too will be talked about and rewatched for years to come. But not for the same reasons we watch the Rossi/Lorenzo stoush. Though there was some more shit-eating.
Catalunya is a track that’s hard on tyres and riders. It’s hot and merciless. Turn 10 eats the makers of mistakes like a fat boy eats biscuits – and it was both very hot and very merciless again this year.
It began benignly enough, if a little strangely. Yes, seeing Rins, Vinales, and Morbidelli as the fastest blokes in FP1 is strange this year. Had Maverick suddenly woken up after signing a two-year deal at Aprilia? Had Franki’s knee finally healed? Was Alex serious about finding a job next year?
Free Practice Two was only strange because Maverick was still second fastest. Otherwise, Aleix was firing that Aprilia along with a purpose, and was easily the quickest, with the Beast just a tad slower than Top Gun, for third. Yeah, this was all kinda normal.
The crucial FP3 saw Aleix remain at the top, with Zarco and Martin keeping it real for Ducati, and outpacing the factory boys, Peco and Jack, who were just behind them. I relaxed. The world had righted itself.
Qualifying One started heading down the strange road again, but not in a hugely disturbing fashion. I mean, sure, Maverick was fastest, and Nakagami was second fastest, out-pacing Bezzechi and the Beast, and Mir was somewhere near the back wondering how he ever won a world championship, no doubt. But other than that, it was all good.
Qualifying Two was normality incarnate. Well, for 2022, anyway. Aleix was pole, Bagnaia was second, and Fabulous was third. My tipping comp had me hang my hat on Fabulous bringing this home, but not for any special reason. Peco could just as easily win here, but I was doubtful Aleix could do so. Why? Well, he’s been strutting around a lot lately. Far too much for a bloke who’s only ever won one race. In his entire career. All he’s doing is demonstrating what a splendid bike Aprilia has built this year.Â
Yes, I know he rates himself one of the three best riders in the world. I do not share that delusion. But he was a very close second in the world championship this year, so maybe he was allowed to swagger a bit.
The race-start was like a punch in the face. Fabulous rocketed to the first corner and everybody followed, and the chaos commenced. Taka, emboldened by being gifted all of Marc Marquez’s new chassis bits and swingarm – an interesting HRC strategy which ignored the other HRC rider, Pol Espargaro, and handed all the goodies over to the satellite Honda team – passed ten riders as he shot off from 12th on the grid.
And then folded his front going into Turn One, and face-planted into Peco’s back-wheel. How he didn’t tear his own head off is a mystery. He did, however, take Peco down, as well as Alex Rins, and very helpfully rejigged the championship for Fabulous.
Happily, Taka was unhurt, as was Peco, but Alex Rins is nursing a broken wrist – and a lot of hate in his heart for Taka Nakagami.
Fabulous then just rode away from everyone else, hotly pursued by Aleix and Martin. Jack Miller seems to have entered the long, dark tea-time of the soul, so he was nowhere to be seen. He started in 11th and finished in 14th, 34-seconds behind the winner. His move to KTM, still unofficial, may or may not be playing a part in how he’s riding at the moment.
None of this mattered to Fabulous, who continued to ride further and further away from his pursuers, with a consistency Jorge Lorenzo would have admired. His lap times were metronomic – and invariably faster than everyone behind him.
There was a little bit of passing action behind him. Martin did get past Aleix for a while, Mir was forced to drop a position as a penalty for overtaking under a yellow flag, and the Beast once again began to make his move from midfield.
Bezzecchi moved himself into the gravel at turn 10, like so many more before him, as Beast passed both Maverick and Pol in one fell swoop. Traumatised, Pol immediately started going backwards. Brad Binder and Miguel Oliveira passed him as well, and you could almost hear Alberto Puig throwing Pol’s belongings into the nearest dumpster.
Remy got himself in front of Jack, which tells you a bit about how jack was feeling that day. I sure hope Remy feels better after that race. He could sure do with a cheering up.
Fabulous was now an hour ahead of the others…well, maybe three seconds, but it might as well have been an hour. Last week’s wunderkind, Fabio Di Giannantonio ploughed some dirt, and for a brief lap, Zarco, sitting in fourth, was the fastest man on the track.
The heat began to chew on the tyres and the lap times started dropping. For everyone except Fabulous. His lead just kept increasing, and the fight, what there was of it, was all for second place, between Aleix, Martin, and Zarco.Â
And so the grind began. Aleix and Martin would gap Zarco a little, then Martin looked to be hard on Aleix’s tail, then Zarco would catch up, and so on. Martin did manage to fire his Ducati past Aleix at the end of the straight, which gave Zarco some hope of a podium at this stage.
Dovi retired. It was all too much, and Pol soldiered on in second-last place. Jack had managed to move into 11th, just behind Alex Marquez, which must have been weird for both of them.Â
Fabulous was now almost six seconds clear, and there were only four laps left, so barring some mistake on his part, this was all his to lose. Aleix, for his part, belted past Martin, and even started to gap him a little, and that looked to be that – Fabulous on the top step, Aleix in number two, and Jorge Martin in third.
Then, on the second last lap, Aleix slowed down, and rolled to a stop. And started waving to the crowd. And feeling like he’d ridden to an excellent second place, no doubt.
Everyone kinda lost their shit. The commentators, who originally thought he’d had a mechanical issue, started honking about the huge mistake Aleix had just made. Maybe he heard them. Or maybe he realised the race was not over when Martin, Zarco, and Mir went hammering past him at full race pace.
He picked up his skirts, tucked in behind his screen and went to finish the race in fifth. Then he went and sat in the corner of his pit garage with his head in his hands and wept. And I do not blame him. This is an error which should not occur at this level, and rarely does. I think it might have last happened when Wayne Rainey was a thing.
Of course, this made world news headlines. The Daily Mail wrote about it. Aleix apologised and tried to explain what happened, but it didn’t really make any sense. He just screwed up. And trying to explain screw-ups is hard. It’s best not to even try.
His mistake gifted Fabulous nine points more than he maybe would have got if Aleix had not screwed the pooch. So Fabulous had a great day. Taka took out Bagnaia for him, Aleix took himself out, and the Beast also helped by having his second DNF in a row. The championship is looking very French at the moment.
Germany is next, then the Cathedral of Speed at Assen. Then a long, five-week summer break. Yeah, it’s gonna get heaps weirder before then, I reckon.
MotoGP Race Results
Pos | Rider | Bike | Time/Gap |
1 | Fabio QUARTARARO | YAMAHA | 40m29.360 |
2 | Jorge MARTIN | DUCATI | +6.473 |
3 | Johann ZARCO | DUCATI | +8.385 |
4 | Joan MIR | SUZUKI | +11.481 |
5 | Aleix ESPARGARO | APRILIA | +14.395 |
6 | Luca MARINI | DUCATI | +15.430 |
7 | Maverick VIÑALES | APRILIA | +15.975 |
8 | Brad BINDER | KTM | +21.436 |
9 | Miguel OLIVEIRA | KTM | +26.800 |
10 | Alex MARQUEZ | HONDA | +30.460 |
11 | Remy GARDNER | KTM | +32.443 |
12 | Darryn BINDER | YAMAHA | +32.881 |
13 | Franco MORBIDELLI | YAMAHA | +33.168 |
14 | Jack MILLER | DUCATI | +34.693 |
15 | Raul FERNANDEZ | KTM | +37.844 |
16 | Michele PIRRO | DUCATI | +44.533 |
17 | Pol ESPARGARO | HONDA | +46.199 |
Not Classified | |||
DNF | Andrea DOVIZIOSO | YAMAHA | 7 laps |
DNF | Fabio DI GIANNANTONIO | DUCATI | 16 laps |
DNF | Enea BASTIANINI | DUCATI | 17 laps |
DNF | Marco BEZZECCHI | DUCATI | 19 laps |
DNF | Francesco BAGNAIA | DUCATI | 23 laps |
DNF | Alex RINS | SUZUKI | DNF |
DNF | Takaaki NAKAGAMI | HONDA | DNF |
DNF | Stefan BRADL | HONDA | DNF |
MotoGP Event Top Speeds
Pos | Rider | Motorcycle | Km/h | Event |
1 | Enea BASTIANINI | DUCATI | 352.9 | FP3 |
2 | Joan MIR | SUZUKI | 352.9 | Q1 |
3 | Pol ESPARGARO | HONDA | 352.9 | Q2 |
4 | Aleix ESPARGARO | APRILIA | 351.7 | Q2 |
5 | Maverick VIÑALES | APRILIA | 350.6 | Q1 |
6 | Brad BINDER | KTM | 350.6 | FP3 |
7 | Luca MARINI | DUCATI | 350.6 | FP3 |
8 | Jack MILLER | DUCATI | 350.6 | Q2 |
9 | Alex RINS | SUZUKI | 350.6 | Q2 |
10 | Johann ZARCO | DUCATI | 350.6 | FP3 |
11 | Francesco BAGNAIA | DUCATI | 350.6 | WUP |
12 | Marco BEZZECCHI | DUCATI | 349.5 | WUP |
13 | Franco MORBIDELLI | YAMAHA | 349.5 | WUP |
14 | Alex MARQUEZ | HONDA | 349.5 | FP3 |
15 | Jorge MARTIN | DUCATI | 348.3 | WUP |
16 | Fabio DI GIANNANTONIO | DUCATI | 348.3 | Q2 |
17 | Miguel OLIVEIRA | KTM | 348.3 | Race |
18 | Stefan BRADL | HONDA | 347.2 | WUP |
19 | Raul FERNANDEZ | KTM | 347.2 | FP3 |
20 | Remy GARDNER | KTM | 347.2 | FP4 |
21 | Fabio QUARTARARO | YAMAHA | 347.2 | Q2 |
22 | Takaaki NAKAGAMI | HONDA | 346.1 | Q1 |
23 | Darryn BINDER | YAMAHA | 345.0 | Q1 |
24 | Michele PIRRO | DUCATI | 345.0 | Q1 |
25 | Andrea DOVIZIOSO | YAMAHA | 343.9 | FP4 |
MotoGP Championship Points Standings
Pos | Rider | Nat | Points |
1 | QUARTARARO Fabio | FRA | 147 |
2 | ESPARGARO Aleix | SPA | 125 |
3 | BASTIANINI Enea | ITA | 94 |
4 | ZARCO Johann | FRA | 91 |
5 | BAGNAIA Francesco | ITA | 81 |
6 | BINDER Brad | RSA | 73 |
7 | RINS Alex | SPA | 69 |
8 | MIR Joan | SPA | 69 |
9 | MILLER Jack | AUS | 65 |
10 | MARQUEZ Marc | SPA | 60 |
11 | OLIVEIRA Miguel | POR | 57 |
12 | MARTIN Jorge | SPA | 51 |
13 | VIÑALES Maverick | SPA | 46 |
14 | MARINI Luca | ITA | 41 |
15 | ESPARGARO Pol | SPA | 40 |
16 | NAKAGAMI Takaaki | JPN | 38 |
17 | BEZZECCHI Marco | ITA | 30 |
18 | MARQUEZ Alex | SPA | 26 |
19 | MORBIDELLI Franco | ITA | 22 |
20 | BINDER Darryn | RSA | 10 |
21 | DI GIANNANTONIO Fabio | ITA | 8 |
22 | DOVIZIOSO Andrea | ITA | 8 |