DUCATI’S Spanish rider Jorge Martin celebrates after winning the Sprint race of the MotoGP Spanish Grand Prix at the Jerez racetrack on Saturday.—AFP
DUCATI’S Spanish rider Jorge Martin celebrates after winning the Sprint race of the MotoGP Spanish Grand Prix at the Jerez racetrack on Saturday.—AFP

JEREZ FRONTERA: Jorge Martin extended his lead in the MotoGP standings as he won the Spanish Grand Prix sprint in Jerez on Saturday after Marc Marquez crashed out while leading late in the race.

Teenager Pedro Acosta was runner up to take second in the championship race with former world champion Fabio Quartararo third as nine riders failed to finish.

All three podium finishers described the track, dappled with damp after morning rain, as tricky.

“A difficult race, the track conditions were super hard,” said Martin in his on-track interview.

Marquez, with his first pole since joining Ducati Gresini, and Martin started on the front row, but South African Brad Binder shot off from the second row to grab the lead on his KTM.

Spaniard Martin overtook on lap two and pulled away from the chaotic battle behind him as riders kept tumbling.

Defending cham­pion Francesco Bag­naia went down on lap three.

Binder squeezed past on the inside, forcing the Italian into another bike.

Bagnaia’s Ducati went flying, out of the race and out of the points.

Martin built a comfortable lead but Marquez was the fastest bike on the course and closed in. Under pressure, Martin made a mistake on lap seven and Marquez pounced.

With three laps left Marquez hit a damp patch and slid off. He remounted to finish seventh.

“I had a good start but then I saw Marquez was coming even though I was pushing a lot, a lot, a lot,” said Martin. “Marc overtook me because I made a mistake on corner seven. Then I tried to push him and he made a mistake.”

Acosta, who started on the fourth row on his GasGas, came through to take second.

Martin went to 92 points in the standings, 29 clear of Acosta who took over second, four points head of Italian Enea Bastianini of Ducati who did not finish.

Spaniard Maverick Vinales, a double winner in Austin last time, is fourth after he too fell on his Aprilia.

Yamaha’s Quartararo, who had started 23rd out of 25 riders, held off a late challenge from Spanish veteran Dani Pedrosa on a KTM to complete the podium.

Martin said he hoped the track would be easier for Sunday’s main race.

“Tomorrow in dry conditions it will be a different story,” he said.

Published in Dawn, April 28th, 2024

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