MotoGP Thailand, Buriram – Sprint Race Results

MotoGP Thailand, Buriram – Sprint Race Results

 
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2023 MotoGP Thailand, Buriram – Sprint Race Results
Pos Rider Nat Team Time/Diff
1 Jorge Martin SPA Pramac Ducati (GP23) 19m 41.593s
2 Brad Binder RSA Red Bull KTM (RC16) +0.933s
3 Luca Marini ITA Mooney VR46 Ducati (GP22) +1.841s
4 Marc Marquez SPA Repsol Honda (RC213V) +3.503s
5 Aleix Espargaro SPA Aprilia Racing (RS-GP23) +3.581s
6 Marco Bezzecchi ITA Mooney VR46 Ducati (GP22) +4.029s
7 Francesco Bagnaia ITA Ducati Lenovo (GP23) +4.121s
8 Alex Marquez SPA Gresini Ducati (GP22) +6.727s
9 Johann Zarco FRA Pramac Ducati (GP23) +7.323s
10 Jack Miller AUS Red Bull KTM (RC16) +9.240s
11 Fabio Quartararo FRA Monster Yamaha (YZR-M1) +9.339s
12 Joan Mir SPA Repsol Honda (RC213V) +10.356s
13 Enea Bastianini ITA Ducati Lenovo (GP23) +12.312s
14 Raul Fernandez SPA RNF Aprilia (RS-GP22) +15.390s
15 Franco Morbidelli ITA Monster Yamaha (YZR-M1) +15.535s
16 Pol Espargaro SPA Tech3 GASGAS (RC16) +15.644s
17 Miguel Oliveira POR RNF Aprilia (RS-GP22) +17.753s
18 Maverick Viñales SPA Aprilia Racing (RS-GP23) +22.675s
19 Takaaki Nakagami JPN LCR Honda (RC213V) +37.854s
  Fabio Di Giannantonio ITA Gresini Ducati (GP22) DNF
  Augusto Fernandez SPA Tech3 GASGAS (RC16)* DNF

*Rookie.

Having lost points to title rival Francesco Bagnaia at the last two races, Jorge Martin has struck back by leading the Thai MotoGP Sprint race from start to finish.

After defending his pole position from Luca Marini at Turn 1, Martin managed a small but safe buffer over the field to cut Bagnaia’s lead.

  • Thai MotoGP Sprint: New MotoGP World Championship standings

KTM’s Brad Binder spent the first half of the 13 laps desperately trying to pass Marini for second place. Once ahead of the VR46 Ducati rider, the South African was unable to make an impact on Martin’s 1.6s lead and spent the closing stages defending the runner-up spot.

Marc Marquez, who had given the gloomy prediction of 10th to 15th place yesterday, instead rose swiftly from eighth to fifth – then snatched fourth from Aleix Espargaro at the final corner of the race, after the pair traded places on the last lap.

Reigning champion Bagnaia, who began the race 27 points clear of pole qualifier Jorge Martin, was roughed up on the opening lap and dropped from sixth to ninth.

The factory Ducati star then clawed his way back to seventh and was the fastest rider on track at one stage, but finished in the wheeltracks of Marco Bezzecchi and was visibly frustrated.

Takaaki Nakagami fell and remounted at the back, Augusto Fernandez ed just before the halfway stage and Fabio di Giannantonio retired with a technical issue.

Maverick Vinales nearly clipped Bagnaia under braking on lap one, ran wide and slipped to 18th, later serving a long lap for track limits.

All riders chose the medium front and medium rear (the softer of the two available this weekend) tyres with the exception of Jack Miller, who picked the hard rear.

  • Thailand Moto2: Latest Results
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Reigning champion Francesco Bagnaia held a 27-point lead over Jorge Martin heading into the Thai MotoGP, after the Pramac Ducati rider’s costly soft tyre gamble backfired on the final lap at Phillip Island.

Alex Rins, who withdrew from Phillip Island due to ongoing pain from his Mugello leg fractures, will miss Thailand after undergoing further surgery.
 

 

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