Motorsports
This is the MotoGP classification after the San Marino GP sprint: The fall of Mark Marquez does not interfere with the Japanese matchbox
Well, that wasn’t the end I would have wanted Mark Marquez For this sprint of San Marino De motogp. However, the purpose is fulfilled. His brother Alex has a match ball in his Japanese career as he was unable to cut him nine points despite the collapse of the World Cup leader.
Marc Marquez was racing the perfect race from his fourth position. I was following six laps and had just placed a leader against Betzekki. He lost control of the Ducati front train on the penultimate curve and went to the ground.
This could give Alex the opportunity to delay his brother’s first game ball, butAt that time he had to win the race. But Betzecchi was always solid and was able to hold that of Gresini behind every sprint wrap. So Alex Only 9 points added And in this respect, lack of marks could already be a Motegi champion.
This Saturday’s victory brings Betzekki to a desperate rhythm to third place for Pecco Bagnaia General. Today, MotoGP’s Bicampeón remained without scoring again in 13th place when everything pointed out that he found something at Misano to get out of the well. It’s not far from reality.
This combination of results has already been seen for judgment: Titles will not move from Cervera. Only Alex could have taken him, but he was the title of his brother Mark.
This is the MotoGP classification after the San Marino GP sprint.
1st Marc Márquez (ESP/Ducati) 487 points
2. Alex Márquez (ESP/Ducati Gresini) 314 points
3. Francesco Bagnaia (ITA/Ducati) 237 points
4. Marco Bezzecchi (ITA/Apriria) 209 points
5. PedroAcosta (ESP/KTM) 188 points
6. Fabiodi Giannantonio (ITA/Ducati VR46) 168 points
7. Franco Morbidelli (ITA/Ducati VR46) 167 points
8. Fermín Aldeguer (ESP/Ducati Gresini) 131 points
9. Fabio Quartararro (FR/Yamaha) 129 points
10. Johann Zarco (Fra/Honda LCR) 117 points
11. BradBinder (RSA/KTM) 95 points
12. Luca Marini (ITA/Honda) 85 points
13. ENEABASTIANINI (ITA/KTM Tech3) 84 points
14. Raúl Fernández (ESP/Apryia Trackhouse) 79 points
15. Maverick Viñales (ESP/KTM Tech3) 72 points
16. AiOgura (Jap/Apriria Trackhouse) 69 points
17. Jack Miller (AUS/Pramac Yamaha) 54 points
18. Joan Mir (ESP/Honda) 50 points
19. AlexRins (ESP/Yamaha) 45 points
20. Jorge Martín (ESP/Apriria) 31 points
twenty one. MiguelOliveira (By/Pramac Yamaha) 17 points
twenty one. PolEspargaró (ESP/KTM Tech3) 16 points
twenty two. Nakagami Takaki (Jap/Honda) 10 points
24. Lorenzo Savadori (ITA/Apriria) 8 points
twenty five. Augusto Fernández (ESP/Pramac Yamaha) 6 points
26. Somkiat Chantra (Tha/LCR Honda) 1 point
27. Aleix Espargaró (ESP/Honda) 0 points
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.
