HungarianGP Breaking news, exclusive interviews & reports - Motorsport Week https://www.motorsportweek.com/tag/hungariangp/ Motorsport Week is an independent, FIA accredited motorsport website delivering the latest Formula 1, Formula E, GP2, GP3, WEC, IndyCar, Nascar, Formula 3, WRC, WRX, DTM, IMSA and MotoGP news and results. Mon, 25 Aug 2025 15:19:17 +0000 en-GB hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.2 https://www.motorsportweek.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/cropped-favicon-1-32x32.png HungarianGP Breaking news, exclusive interviews & reports - Motorsport Week https://www.motorsportweek.com/tag/hungariangp/ 32 32 Marc Marquez: ‘Not normal to win every weekend’ despite Hungarian MotoGP domination https://www.motorsportweek.com/2025/08/25/marc-marquez-not-normal-to-win-every-weekend-despite-hungarian-motogp-domination/ https://www.motorsportweek.com/2025/08/25/marc-marquez-not-normal-to-win-every-weekend-despite-hungarian-motogp-domination/#respond Mon, 25 Aug 2025 13:30:00 +0000 https://www.motorsportweek.com/?p=220502

Marc Marquez admits “it’s not normal to win every weekend” despite his 2025 dominance following his triumphs at the Hungarian MotoGP round.

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Marc Marquez admits “it’s not normal to win every weekend” after his 2025 dominance continued at the Hungarian MotoGP round.

The Spanish rider took one step closer to a ninth world title as he sealed a seventh double of the season at the new Balaton Park circuit, taking victory by over four seconds at the flag.

Despite falling behind Marco Bezzecchi at the start, Marquez revealed he was “comfortable” throughout Sunday’s Grand Prix as he made the race-winning move on Lap 11. 

However, the Spanish rider also admitted his achievement of winning at 13 of the 14 rounds this campaign was “not normal.”

“I cannot lie, today was comfortable,” Marquez told MotoGP.com after Sunday’s race.

“I was riding in a very good way. It’s true that everything that happened as we’ve seen in the first two corners, but after that I got momentum. 

“I just cooled down and just tried to warm my rear tyre because I was with the medium and from that point, just to build the race and as soon as I led the race, the pace was good. 

“I was fluid on the track, I was on the good lines so today was a very good day, but it’s not normal. It’s not normal to win every weekend, it’s not normal to win every Sprint race, it looks like [it] but it’s not. 

“There will arrive a day when somebody will be faster than us in a Sprint or a main race but it’s better to score a second position or third position, points for the championship.”

Marc Marquez shares “scary moment” en route to Hungarian victory. – Credit: Ducati Media House

Marc Marquez: ‘My mistake’ to cause Turn 2 collision with Marco Bezzecchi

Despite feeling comfortable throughout the Hungarian GP, Marquez had a “scary moment” on the opening lap of the race with Bezzecchi. 

The Spanish rider made contact with the Aprilia rider at Turn 2 after relinquishing the lead of the race, but accepted full responsibility as the rider behind in the incident. 

“We arrive at the first corner, I braked late and I was able to stop the bike well,” Marquez told of the incident. 

“But then I was thinking ‘ok I’ll just release the brakes’ because I didn’t know how much control Bezzecchi and maybe another guy inside had. 

“I released the brakes and I turned late, I knew I would lose the position but I prefer to not to take the risk. 

“At Turn 2 it was my mistake, because the rider behind always needs to be careful about the front rider, but I didn’t expect him to slow down so much. 

“With angle I wasn’t able to brake, and we had that contact. We escaped from that moment but it was a scary moment.”

Marc Marquez reveals why he wants ‘first opportunity’ at MotoGP title in Japan over Misano

A seventh Sprint-race double of the season has edged Marquez ever closer to a ninth world title, which he could have a chance of winning by Misano. 

The Spanish rider admitted he’d prefer not to win the championship at Misano, as it would mean misfortune for his brother Alex Marquez in the next round in Barcelona.

“Of course, now every time it’s getting closer and closer but we need to keep the same mentality and the same focus,” Marquez said. 

“Yesterday we speak a bit with the Spanish journalists, they were asking, they were pushing and they gave me the numbers.

“ I need to say I wish the first opportunity I have [to win the championship] in Japan or Mandalika, because if I have it in Misano it means my brother had a disaster weekend in Catalunya and I want the best for him.”

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Luca Marini: Honda is making ‘remarkable strides’ in MotoGP development https://www.motorsportweek.com/2025/08/25/luca-marini-honda-is-making-remarkable-strides-in-motogp-development/ https://www.motorsportweek.com/2025/08/25/luca-marini-honda-is-making-remarkable-strides-in-motogp-development/#respond Mon, 25 Aug 2025 09:30:00 +0000 https://www.motorsportweek.com/?p=220456 Honda MotoGP rider Luca Marini

Luca Marini is impressed with the "remarkable strides" Honda has made in its development over the past year in MotoGP.

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Honda MotoGP rider Luca Marini

Luca Marini is impressed with the “remarkable strides” Honda has made in its development over the past year in MotoGP.

The Italian rider and the Japanese marque finished dead last in both championships during the 2024 season, enduring their worst-ever campaign in the premier class.

In 2025, Honda has taken steps forward, highlighted by Johann Zarco’s win at Le Mans and Marini finishing every race he competed in, despite missing three rounds due to injury.

Aside from rookie Somkiat Chantra, who has scored just one point, Zarco, Marini, and Joan Mir have placed Honda in the battle for ‘best of the rest’ behind Ducati.

Marini is choosing not to get complacent, stating to GPOne: “We have to keep our heads down and work because, in my opinion, there is still so much to sort out.

“In any case, it’s part of the process, we are making remarkable strides, especially considering where we started from.

“We have made a lot of changes since i arrived and that has allowed us to have decent speed here, in Austria and at two or three other tracks, especially where there is grip.

“Whereas now in Barcelona it’s going to be a big question mark because it’s a track where there is little grip and the engine matters so much and right now, those are our two weak points.

“We’ll see how we perform there.”

The 28-year-old produced his season-best result at the inaugural Hungarian round at Balaton Park, finishing fourth in Saturday’s Sprint and fifth in the Grand Prix.

He tussled in a battle with Franco Morbidelli and Jorge Martin, defeating only the former as Martin secured a career-best fourth place for Aprilia.

“Very good race, I had fun,” Marini told the media post-race.

“I got off to a really good start, in the first two corners, I juggled around pretty well, and then everything went pretty much according to plan.

“We were all there one in a row, half a second apart. Honestly, it already seemed to me that both me and Jorge [Martin] were a little bit faster than Franco [Morbidelli], but it’s really hard to overtake so we waited for the tyres to drop a little bit.

“It went really well, I’m happy with all the work we did all over the weekend and how we’re improving.”

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Marc Marquez triumphs in inaugural MotoGP race at Balaton Park https://www.motorsportweek.com/2025/08/24/marc-marquez-triumphs-at-inaugural-motogp-race-at-balaton-park/ https://www.motorsportweek.com/2025/08/24/marc-marquez-triumphs-at-inaugural-motogp-race-at-balaton-park/#respond Sun, 24 Aug 2025 12:49:39 +0000 https://www.motorsportweek.com/?p=220421

Marc Marquez triumphed in the inaugural MotoGP race at Balaton Park, securing his seventh consecutive victory in the process.

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Marc Marquez triumphed in the inaugural MotoGP race at Balaton Park, securing his seventh consecutive victory in the process.

The factory Ducati rider continued his dominance as he sealed his tenth Grand Prix win of the season.

The Spaniard was joined on the rostrum by Pedro Acosta and Marco Bezzecchi, completing a podium made up of three different manufacturers.

Marquez held his lead from pole position to take the holeshot into Turn 1, but Aprilia’s Bezzecchi made an impressive overtake at Turn 2.

The Spaniard made contact with the Aprilia, which saw him drop back to fourth, but he immediately climbed back up to third.

Fabio Di Giannantonio appeared to have an issue with the rear of his bike, meaning he dropped from third to the pit lane.

Enea Bastianini was handed a double long-lap penalty after taking out Honda’s Johann Zarco in Saturday’s Sprint, but never got the chance to serve it, crashing out on Lap 1.

Alex Marquez went down at Turn 1 on the second lap, a crash that could have major implications for the championship considering his older brother’s advantage.

On Lap 3, Bezzecchi opened up a 0.8s advantage over his fellow VR46 Academy graduate Franco Morbidelli, with factory Ducati’s Marquez just a few bike lengths behind.

Yamaha’s Fabio Quartararo served his long-lap penalty on Lap 4, handed to him for taking out Bastianini at Turn 1 during Saturday’s Sprint, demoting him down to 12th.

Trackhouse rider Raul Fernandez and Joan Mir crashed out at the final corner on the exact same lap, but only Fernandez rejoined.

Jack Miller lost the front of his Pramac Yamaha, adding to the growing list of early crashes in the race.

Out front, championship leader Marquez completed a comfortable block pass on Morbidelli at Turn 5, before posting back-to-back fastest laps.

Realistically, it took Marquez only two laps to get to the back of the Aprilia, but his first chance arrived at Turn 1 on Lap 8. The Spaniard ran wide, and Bezzecchi slotted his way back through, only for a near-identical battle to take place at Turn 5.

The Ducati’s superior acceleration was evident as Marquez took wider exits out of corners, while Bezzecchi maximised the Aprilia’s performance.

On Lap 11, Marquez executed the long-awaited move into Turn 1 and surged ahead to open a 0.8-second advantage by the following lap.

The gap extended further to 1.5s by the end of Lap 13, while Bezzecchi’s Aprilia came under threat from Pedro Acosta’s KTM.

The KTM rider had reduced the gap to 0.3s, but there was no perfect opportunity at the halfway phase.

Away from the lead trio, rookie Fermin Aldeguer lost the front into Turn 1, resulting in a double crash from both Gresini Ducati riders.

Although his team-mate Alex Marquez continued, the Spaniard occupied 15th for the vast majority of the race.

Factory Ducati rider Francesco Bagnaia started 13th and climbed to eighth, but after running wide, he was forced to lose a second upon rejoining. Despite that, he was handed a long-lap penalty, costing him a position.

While his struggles aboard the GP25 continued, his team-mate Marquez established a 2.8s gap over the rest of the field.

Behind the distant championship leader, Acosta climbed to second place after a Turn 1 overtake on Bezzecchi.

Pramac rider Miller crashed out for a second time, though this time he was unable to rejoin due to existing bike damage to his Yamaha.

LCR Honda rider Johann Zarco crashed out at Turn 8, meaning the Frenchman ends the weekend with zero points.

Marquez’s victory marks his seventh consecutive win and brings him one step closer to a ninth world championship.

Acosta sealed another rostrum for KTM as he crossed the line 4.3s behind his fellow countryman.

Bezzecchi rounded off the podium spots after leading for the first 11 laps of the race.

In fourth was Jorge Martin, who posted his best result on the Aprilia after starting 16th, closely followed by Honda’s Luca Marini and VR46 Ducati’s Morbidelli.

KTM’s Brad Binder and test rider Pol Espargaro ensured the Austrian marque had strong performers all round, securing seventh and eighth place, respectively.

Bagnaia secured ninth place, crossing the line nearly 15s behind his race-winning team-mate.

Fabio Quartararo rounded off the top ten for Yamaha, followed by rookie Ai Ogura and the Yamaha duo of Miguel Oliveira and Alex Rins.

Gresini’s Marquez secured 14th place as a result of multiple riders crashing, as Di Giannantonio claimed the final point after the torrid start.

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David Alonso produces late charge to seal maiden Moto2 victory at Balaton Park https://www.motorsportweek.com/2025/08/24/david-alonso-produces-late-charge-to-seal-maiden-moto2-victory-at-balaton-park/ https://www.motorsportweek.com/2025/08/24/david-alonso-produces-late-charge-to-seal-maiden-moto2-victory-at-balaton-park/#respond Sun, 24 Aug 2025 11:12:34 +0000 https://www.motorsportweek.com/?p=220415

David Alonso produced a late charge from fifth to first as he claimed his maiden Moto2 victory at the brand-new Balaton Park circuit. 

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David Alonso produced a late charge from fifth to first as he claimed his maiden Moto2 victory at the brand-new Balaton Park circuit. 

Alonso prevailed over championship contenders Manuel Gonzalez and Diogo Moreira on the final two laps of the race as he won his first-ever race in the intermediate class by 0.174s.

Gonzalez made the best start from third, as he held the inside line to take the lead from polesitter Moreira.

Further down the order, chaos struck at Turn 1 as four riders were taken out of contention, with Celestino Vietti, Yuki Kunii, Darryn Binder and Unai Orradre all falling victim to the difficult race start.

Amidst the drama behind, Jake Dixon made a strong start from the second row and managed to overtake both Moreira and Gonzalez for the lead of the race. 

While both Moreira and Gonzalez looked to be the quicker riders throughout, Dixon’s strong late-braking allowed him to retain the lead ahead of the championship contenders.

However, on Lap 4 the Brazilian was able to use his superior pace to pass Dixon after the British rider ran onto the green paint at Turn 5. 

A lap later, the championship leader made his move on Dixon to take second place, and attempted to close on Moreira who had set the fastest lap of the race. 

A slight bobble for Moreira out of Turn 5 allowed Gonzalez to close the gap, with the Spaniard cutting three tenths out of the Brazilian’s lead in a single lap. 

Aron Canet spent a number of laps looking to pass Dixon, but the rookie duo of Collin Veijer and David Alonso capitalised on the Spaniard’s drop in pace to take fourth and fifth respectively. 

At the front, Gonzalez continued to close the gap between himself and the Brazilian and was finally able to take his opportunity on Lap 15, as he took the lead and immediately attempted to break away. 

In the battle for the final podium positions behind, Alonso set a new lap record as he used his new-found pace to pass fellow rookie Veijer for fourth.

At the front, Gonzalez had a big moment on the curbs coming out of Turn 5 to allow Moreira to close in, but the Spaniard managed to retain his position, but brought the second group of Dixon and Alonso back into contention.

Alonso was able to use the change to his advantage, as he stole third place from Dixon going into the first corner and attempted to charge onto the back of the leading pair. 

The reigning Moto3 World Champion studied the braking of Moreira ahead, and with two laps remaining he made his move at Turn 1, holding onto the position despite having his foot come off the side of his Aspar machine.

Gonzalez was next to come under pressure from the fast-charging Alonso, but the Colombian was unable to produce an overtake at his favoured Turn 1. 

At Turn 9, Alonso finally decided to strike and forced Gonzalez wide at the chicane, as the Aspar rider looked on course to take a debut victory in the class. 

The Colombian ran wide at the final chicane to allow Moreira one final opportunity to clinch the race victory, as the leading trio were level down the last straight. 

Alonso came through to seal his maiden Moto2 victory as he became the first Colombian to win a race in the intermediate class. 

Moreira maintained second place over the line despite contact with Gonzalez, with the disgruntled Spaniard completing the podium. 

Dixon clinched fourth ahead of Veijer in fifth, while Canet eventually crossed the line in sixth. 

Adrian Huertas produced his best result in Moto2 to date as he took seventh, as Filip Salac saw the chequered flag in eighth. 

Daniel Holgado led fellow rookie Ivan Ortola over the line as the pair took ninth and 10th respectively, with Marcos Ramirez a distant 11th.

Barry Baltus was forced to take a long lap due to track limits but came home in 12th, as Zonta van den Goorbergh finished 13th. 

Albert Arenas was involved in the first corner incident but crossed the line in 14th, as Tony Arbolino completed the points finishers in 15th.

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Maximo Quiles storms to photo finish Hungarian Moto3 victory https://www.motorsportweek.com/2025/08/24/maximo-quiles-storms-to-photo-finish-hungarian-moto3-victory/ https://www.motorsportweek.com/2025/08/24/maximo-quiles-storms-to-photo-finish-hungarian-moto3-victory/#respond Sun, 24 Aug 2025 10:01:48 +0000 https://www.motorsportweek.com/?p=220404

Maximo Quiles produced a remarkable comeback as he edged out Valentin Perrone to seal the Hungarian Moto3 victory via a photo finish.

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Maximo Quiles produced a remarkable comeback as he edged out Valentin Perrone to seal the Hungarian Moto3 victory via a photo finish.

The Spanish rider recovered after losing the lead of the race to fellow rookie Perrone, as the pair were separated by just 0.018s over the line. 

Quiles made the best start from pole position and held his lead down into the first two corners. 

The rest of the front row also made a good start, with Perrone and Angel Piqueras holding their positions in second and third, before David Munoz was forced to sit up going into Turn 2. 

Further down the order, championship leader Jose Antonio Rueda was unable to make progress on the start and was overtaken by Guido Pini as he settled into eighth place.

On Lap 3, Quiles ran wide at the first chicane to allow Perrone to take the lead, but the Spaniard responded straight away to regain the position. 

Behind the lead pair, Munoz seemingly recovered from his second corner blunder to move ahead of Angel Piqueras into the podium positions, before passing Perrone to take second. 

Piqueras didn’t waste much time in making his move past the Argentine, as the Spaniard followed Munoz’s lead to steal the last podium spot. 

Down into Turn 9. Piqueras regained his place in front of Munoz as the rider sitting second in the championship moved into second in the race.

The pair then relinquished their positions back to Perrone down the straight, but a small error for the Argentinian in Turn 14 allowed Piqueras back into second place. 

Munoz also returned to the rostrum by overtaking Perrone, and set the fastest lap of the race in his bid to re-pass Piqueras.

As Quiles looked to up the pace at the front, he made an error at Turn 15 to allow the three riders behind to overtake, with Perrone taking the lead after receiving some slipstream from Munoz down the straight. 

Guido Pini also made a slight error behind Quiles, which allowed Rueda to take fifth and close in on the leading group. 

As the Italian faded from the leading group, Munoz struck once more on Piqueras to re-take second place, though Perrone continued to hold firm at the front of the field. 

Quiles also showed his overtaking prowess by pulling a move on Piqueras to put himself back into the podium positions, and crucially found a rider between himself and championship leader Rueda.

The young Spaniard found his rhythm to put another overtake on Munoz for second, as he attempted to close the gap to Perrone in the lead. 

Going onto the final lap, it was a head-to-head between Perrone and Quiles for the victory, as the young Spaniard looked to make his move at the opening few corners, but the Argentine’s sweeping lines made him hold position. 

At Turn 5, Quiles made his move on Perrone, and this time was able to make it stick as he attempted to lead for the remainder of the final lap.

In the final chicane, the Argentinian set up a last-ditch attempt to take the victory, levelling Quiles to move back in front. 

However, Quiles responded in the last corner and the riders drew level as they raced to the finish line down the main straight, making slight contact before the flag. 

It was Quiles who crossed the line first to record his second victory of the campaign by just 0.018s. 

Perrone was forced to settle for second despite a valiant fight back, while Munoz completed the podium in third. 

Piqueras narrowly missed out on a visit to the rostrum in fourth as he slightly closed the gap on championship leader Rueda, who took fifth. 

Adrian Fernandez led Leopard team-mate David Almansa over the line as the pair took sixth and seventh respectively, with Joel Kelso just behind in eighth. 

Alvaro Carpe completed the race in ninth as Jacob Roulstone rounded out the top 10. 

Dennis Foggia spent the majority of the race on his own as crossed the line in 11th, two seconds clear of Nicola Carraro in 12th.

Casey O’Gorman ended his final stand-in race for the Sic58 Squadra in 13th, while both Ryusei Yamanaka and Marcos Uriarte were forced to visit the gravel trap to avoid a crashing Scott Ogden, but came home to complete the points finishers.

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Marc Marquez cruises to MotoGP Sprint victory at Balaton Park https://www.motorsportweek.com/2025/08/23/marc-marquez-cruises-to-motogp-sprint-victory-at-balaton-park/ https://www.motorsportweek.com/2025/08/23/marc-marquez-cruises-to-motogp-sprint-victory-at-balaton-park/#respond Sat, 23 Aug 2025 13:29:00 +0000 https://www.motorsportweek.com/?p=220362

Marc Marquez cruises to MotoGP Sprint victory at Balaton Park

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Championship leader Marc Marquez cruised to yet another MotoGP Sprint victory, claiming his 13th short-race win of the 2025 season at Balaton Park.

The Spaniard crossed the line a distant 2.1s clear of the VR46 Ducati duo of Fabio Di Giannantonio and Franco Morbidelli.

Polesitter Marquez secured a perfect launch off the line into Turn 1, but the tight corner saw drama as Frenchman Fabio Quartararo took out Enea Bastianini.

The 2021 champion narrowly avoided a collision with Di Giannantonio and Marquez, and fortunately, only two riders were caught up in the incident with no injuries to report.

Bastianini rejoined after running through the gravel, but his race came to an end later that lap when he and Frenchman Johann Zarco crashed out.

Aprilia rider Marco Bezzecchi was caught up after starting second, dropping back to eighth place.

Marquez established a 0.5s advantage by the end of Lap 1, followed by the VR46 Ducati duo of Di Giannantonio and Morbidelli.

The lead kept growing as the Spaniard grew the gap to 1.0s, but the notable Turn 1 Lap 1 incident promoted the Honda duo of Luca Marini and Joan Mir to fourth and fifth place.

Mir ran wide on Lap 5, allowing Gresini rider Fermin Aldeguer to rise up to fifth place aboard his GP24 Ducati.

The stop-start nature of the new Hungarian track made overtaking a tough task, as shown by the tight scrap between Alex Marquez and Pol Espargaro.

Marquez ran wide when trying a lunge, allowing Espargaro to ease his way back through to reclaim eighth position.

Behind them, Jorge Martin and Pedro Acosta were locked in another battle, but Acosta’s attempted move ended in disaster as he ran wide and crashed out. Marquez and Martin inevitably found a way through.

Out front, Marc Marquez stretched out a 2.5s lead, but he must be cautious as he was issued a track limits warning with six laps to go.

That concern quickly faded, as the Spaniard dominated from start to finish to secure another win.

Di Giannantonio, the second GP25 Ducati rider, secured a strong result despite having to fight his way through the first phase of qualifying earlier in the day.

Morbidelli rounded off the podium spots, finishing 1.5s behind his fellow countryman and team-mate.

Marini secured a strong result for Honda to finish fourth, closely followed by rookie Aldeguer and team-mate Mir.

Bezzecchi’s seventh was all he could muster for Aprilia, but he fended off against championship rival Alex Marquez.

Martin secured ninth place and the final point in the short-race format, closely followed by KTM’s Pol Espargaro.

Raul Fernandez and Jack Miller followed as the pair crossed the line ahead of 13th-place rider, factory Ducati rider Francesco Bagnaia.

Miguel Oliveira and Ai Ogura finished 14th and 15th, respectively, with Alex Rins and Pedro Acosta closing out proceedings.

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Marc Marquez seals dominant pole in Balaton Park MotoGP qualifying https://www.motorsportweek.com/2025/08/23/marc-marquez-seals-dominant-pole-in-balaton-park-motogp-qualifying/ https://www.motorsportweek.com/2025/08/23/marc-marquez-seals-dominant-pole-in-balaton-park-motogp-qualifying/#respond Sat, 23 Aug 2025 09:47:52 +0000 https://www.motorsportweek.com/?p=220307

Marc Marquez dominated the first-ever Hungarian MotoGP qualifying session at Balaton Park to claim pole position with a new lap record.

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Marc Marquez dominated the first-ever Hungarian MotoGP qualifying session at Balaton Park to claim pole position with a new lap record.

The eight-time World Champion sealed the first MotoGP pole position around the Balaton Park circuit by 0.290s.

Pedro Acosta crashed in the opening minutes of Q2, disrupting many of the riders’ first attempts at lap times, though Marquez was able to come through to set the early pace.

The Spanish rider continued his form as the yellow flags came in, setting the fastest lap time of the weekend with a 1:36.646. 

Though there were a number of challenges throughout the session, Marquez managed to go even faster on his final attempt, sealing pole position with a time of 1:36.518.

Marco Bezzecchi and Fabio Di Giannantonio came through from Q1 to make the front row, with Bezzecchi in second and Di Giannantonio taking third. 

Enea Bastianini qualified fourth to head the second row of the grid, while Franco Morbidelli took fifth at the end of the session. 

Fabio Quartararo completed the session in sixth after setting a strong final lap ahead of Acosta in seventh after his early crash. 

Fermin Aldeguer finished his qualifying campaign in eighth to finish ahead of both factory Honda riders, with Luca Marini in ninth and Joan Mir taking the flag in 10th. 

Alex Marquez struggled throughout the session and could only manage 11th, which would become 14th for Sunday’s race due to his three place grid penalty for disturbing Francesco Bagnaia in practice. 

Riding for Tech3 as a replacement for the injured Maverick Vinales, Pol Espargaro completed the Q2 standings in 12th after suffering a crash with seconds left on the clock. 

Brad Binder set an identical lap time to Fabio Di Giannantonio, but was eliminated in Q1 on a tiebreaker, meaning the South African could only qualify 13th.

Jack Miller completed his qualifying in 14th, while Francesco Bagnaia continued his disappointing run of form and rounded out the fifth row in 15th. 

Raul Fernandez headed the sixth row after qualifying 16th, ahead of reigning World Champion Jorge Martin in 17th and Johann Zarco in 18th.

Miguel Oliveira showed strong pace at the start of the session, but only managed 19th at the end of the session.

Alex Rins took the flag in 20th, while Ai Ogura completed the standings after qualifying 21st.

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Marc Marquez fastest in final Hungarian MotoGP practice https://www.motorsportweek.com/2025/08/23/marc-marquez-fastest-in-final-hungarian-motogp-practice/ https://www.motorsportweek.com/2025/08/23/marc-marquez-fastest-in-final-hungarian-motogp-practice/#comments Sat, 23 Aug 2025 08:58:15 +0000 https://www.motorsportweek.com/?p=220303

Marc Marquez claimed the fastest time to top the timesheets at the final Hungarian MotoGP practice session.

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Marc Marquez claimed the fastest time to top the timesheets at the final Hungarian MotoGP practice session.

Marquez has consistently shown his plans for dominance around the new circuit, and narrowly showed himself as the fastest rider with a time of 1:37.355. 

Pedro Acosta also carried over his strong pace from Friday, proving the closest challenger to the championship leader as he was pipped to top spot by just 0.008s. 

Fabio Di Giannantonio completed the top three, a further tenth behind the top two, while Fermin Aldeguer and Marco Bezzecchi completed the top five. 

Enea Bastianini and Joan Mir continued their strong form from the Red Bull Ring, finishing final practice in sixth and seventh respectively, ahead of the second factory KTM of Brad Binder in eighth. 

Alex Marquez ended his session in ninth as reigning World Champion Jorge Martin rounded out the top 10. 

Miguel Oliveira and Ai Ogura set identical lap times, as the Portuguese rider stole 11th ahead of the Trackhouse rider in 12th.

Luca Marini took 13th at the chequered flag, while Pol Espargaro continued his strong form as a replacement rider for Maverick Vinales in 14th.

Fabio Quartararo ended the final practice session in 15th, edging out former team-mate Franco Morbidelli who took 16th.

Johann Zarco had difficulties throughout practice as he concluded the session in 17th, while Francesco Bagnaia’s struggles continued as he could only manage 18th. 

Raul Fernandez set his fastest time in 19th, with Alex Rins 20th as the flag was thrown out. Jack Miller completed the standings in 21st.

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Pedro Acosta tops second Balaton Park MotoGP practice https://www.motorsportweek.com/2025/08/22/pedro-acosta-tops-second-balaton-park-motogp-practice/ https://www.motorsportweek.com/2025/08/22/pedro-acosta-tops-second-balaton-park-motogp-practice/#respond Fri, 22 Aug 2025 14:12:42 +0000 https://www.motorsportweek.com/?p=220268

KTM rider Pedro Acosta topped the timesheets in the second MotoGP practice at the inaugural Balaton Park round.

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KTM rider Pedro Acosta topped the timesheets in the second MotoGP practice at the inaugural Balaton Park round.

The Spaniard finished third in first practice before lapping 1.5s quicker to post an impressive time of 1.37.061s.

Marc and Alex Marquez finished as Acosta’s nearest challengers, lapping 0.006s and 0.281s slower, respectively.

Fermin Aldeguer made a step to finish the session in fourth place, closely followed by Italian rider Enea Bastianini.

Franco Morbidelli posted a lap to place him sixth for VR46 Ducati, as Honda’s Joan Mir secured a Q2 place on his final run and ended up seventh.

Pol Espargaro secured eighth ahead of Honda’s Luca Marini and Yamaha’s Fabio Quartararo, with the latter the sole Yamaha rider in the top 10.

Jorge Martin and Marco Bezzecchi both missed out by a tenth of a second, showing Aprilia are lacking in pace compared to previous races.

Fabio Di Giannantonio and Francesco Bagnaia struggled as the pair finished 13th and 14th on their respective GP25 Ducati machinery.

Brad Binder placed himself in 15th as the final KTM rider, closely accompanied by rookie Ai Ogura and Pramac Yamaha’s Jack Miller.

Miguel Oliveira and the second Trackhouse rider of Raul Fernandez slotted themselves in 18th and 19th.

Johann Zarco suffered a late crash, finishing 20th, but the final classified rider went to Yamaha’s Alex Rins.

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Marc Marquez quickest in first MotoGP practice at Balaton Park https://www.motorsportweek.com/2025/08/22/marc-marquez-quickest-in-first-motogp-practice-at-balaton-park/ https://www.motorsportweek.com/2025/08/22/marc-marquez-quickest-in-first-motogp-practice-at-balaton-park/#respond Fri, 22 Aug 2025 10:10:44 +0000 https://www.motorsportweek.com/?p=220237

Distant championship leader Marc Marquez continued his dominance by topping the timesheets at MotoGP's newest circuit, Balaton Park.

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Distant championship leader Marc Marquez continued his dominance by topping the timesheets at MotoGP’s newest circuit, Balaton Park.

The factory Ducati rider posted a 1.37.956s, finishing the session as the sole rider in the 1.37s.

After Marquez was KTM test rider Pol Espargaro, who had previously tested the new track ahead of the race weekend.

Pedro Acosta rounded off the top three to continue his strong form, lapping 0.570s behind Marquez.

Luca Marini posted a lap to place his Honda in fourth, followed closely by Gresini’s Alex Marquez and Aprilia’s Marco Bezzecchi.

Franco Morbidelli escaped injury after crashing twice to finish seventh for VR46 Ducati.

Enea Bastianini secured eighth for Tech3 KTN, as he and rookie Fermin Aldeguer shared identical lap times.

Jorge Martin rounded off the top 10 for Aprilia, even though his RS-GP suffered a massive engine blowout during the session.

Fabio Quartararo and Fabio Di Giannantonio secured 11th and 12th, respectively, followed closely by Pramac Yamaha’s Jack Miller.

Johann Zarco finished the next highest Honda in 14th, but the surprise of the session was factory Ducati rider Francesco Bagnaia finishing down in 15th.

Both Trackhouse Racing riders, Raul Fernandez and Ai Ogura, secured 16th and 17th, with both riders lapping faster than Miguel Oliveira and Joan Mir.

Alex Rins and Brad Binder closed out proceedings, lapping two seconds slower than the series leader.

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