Motorsports
Alonso Lopez leads Spanish exhibition in third free practice at Motorland
Alonso Lopez (Bosco Curro) returned to the top of the timetable in the final round of free practice, the third round. Up to seven Spanish riders finished in the top ten at the Moto2 Motorland Aragon Grand Prix.
Japan’s Ai Ogura (Kalex) wasn’t so lucky as to crash early in the session, which had no effect on his physical integrity, but disrupted his training plan on the track, Augusto Fernández reduced his time from day one to shoot in 1:52.818, giving him first position on the track. got back. He was overtaken by Spain’s Albert his Arenas (Carex) who stopped the clock at 1:52.680.
Shortly after, another Spaniard made the news. Spaniard Alon Canet (Kalex) has not set a new record since day one, crashing in turn two and moving from the lead to fifth.Albert Arenas, Augusto Fernandez, Italy’s Tony Arbolino (Kalex) and Spain’s Alonso Lopez (Boskosclaw).
As time went on, so did the work of the team and the drivers, and we were able to break all the best times from day one. The last one was Alonso Lopez (Bosco Curro), but moved up to first placean 87/1000 second advantage over Augusto Fernández and a little more than Pedro Acosta (Kalex) and Aron Canetto, was able to quickly repair the damage to his bike and get back on track.
Eventually, Alonso Lopez set the fastest time, while Fernandes and Kane improved after their crashes to be 0.2 seconds behind the Moto2 World Championship leader., Pedro Acosta 4th, Tony Arbolino 5th, Great Britain’s Jake Dixon (Karex) 6th, Fermin Aldeguer (Bosco Crosco), Joe Roberts (Karex), Jorge Navarro (Karex), Albert Arenas, followed by Dutchman Bo Benzneider (Karex). ), Thailand’s Somkiat Chantra (Karex), Spain’s Manuel Gonzales (Karex) and Czech Philip Salak (Karex) went straight into the second classification.
Japan’s Ai Ogura was hardly left behindJeremy Alcoba (Karex), Italy’s Celestino Vietti (Karex) and Spain’s Marcos Ramirez (MV Agusta), who fell without impact near the end of the session.
Source: Mundo Deportivo
I am a writer at Sportish, where I mainly cover sports news. I’ve also written for The Guardian and ESPN Brasil, and my work has been featured on NBC Sports, SI.com and more. Before working in journalism, I was an athlete: I played football for Colgate University and competed in the US Open Cross Country Championships.
