Motorsports
First pole in my life at local Chantra
Thailand’s Somkiat Chantra conquered the first pole of his life in Moto2 in the best possible scenario. Chan at his international in Buriram celebrated the success of the only Thai, surrounded by his warm crowd from the grandstands just above the pitlane at his circuit. grill. He has the advantage of being accompanied on the front row by Arbolino and his teammate Ai Ogura, the second-placed team in the World Cup and starting just eighth behind leaders Augusto Fernández. Two points separated Fernandes and Ogura before the start of the Moto2 race.
The first provisional pole was assigned by local Somkiat Chantra at 1’35″625, which is already very close to team-mate Ogura’s best free practice time. Entering the provisional front line.
Already on the first lap, Arón Canet crashed at Turn 5 and was barely pulling in his third crash at Buriram. Pedro Acosta stopped a few laps at the start of qualifying, went down in the third Albert Arenas (provisional 13th), and Joe Roberts was hit from behind with his motorcycle and suffered an ugly highside, but picked himself up The yellow flag ruined several drivers’ laps, leaving both Kane and Arenas exiting options.
On lap six, Pedro Acosta improved for a fourth and two laps ahead, with Alonso López in sixth and championship leader Augusto Fernández in provisional eighth without slipstreaming. The temperature and humidity have risen, so it is no longer possible to improve.
Augusto Fernández falls to this provisional third row, sharing the same position with 9th-placed Djoprzi Navarro, 10th-placed Manu González, 14th-placed Jeremy Alcoba, 15th-placed Albert Arenas and 18th-placed Aron Canetto.
Going through the first quarter, Vietti, Kubo, Bendsneyder and Roberts made it through the playoffs while Sam Lowes was beaten by a margin of 1 in 17,000. Ardegher will start in his 21st position and Ramirez in his 27th position.
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.
