Ducatiâs defending world champion Francesco Bagnaia won the MotoGP season-opening Qatar Grand Prix on Sunday after taking the lead on the opening lap to beat Red Bull KTMâs Brad Binder and Pramac Racingâs pole sitter Jorge MartĂn.
Bagnaia had finished fourth in Saturdayâs sprint but his faultless ride to take the chequered flag in the race moved him to the top of the championship with 31 points.
Binder, who also finished second in the sprint, sits two points behind with 29 while last yearâs championship runner-up MartĂn is a point further behind.
âWe tried to do the maximum knowing something important had to be changed for todayâs race. After todayâs warm-up [the bike] was absolutely different to yesterday,â Bagnaia said after his first victory at the Lusail International Circuit.
Marc MĂĄrquez finished fourth on his Gresini Racing debut aboard a Ducati bike following his switch from Honda while 19-year-old rookie Pedro Acosta nearly stole the show in search of a podium before falling back to finish ninth.
MartĂn and Binder both shot off the line at the start as they did in Saturdayâs sprint to sit first and second, but Bagnaia put his head down and made two daring overtakes to take the lead on the opening lap.
âIâm super stoked with the result today. We knew it was going to be tough to make the tyres last until the end,â said Binder, who finished 1.3 seconds behind Bagnaia. Martin had dominated qualifying and the sprint but he soon found himself in a battle for second with Binder while Gresiniâs Alex MĂĄrquez moved up to fifth to sit behind his brother Marc.
Behind him, Acosta set a fastest lap and the Red Bull GasGas Tech3 rider rode fearlessly to quickly move up to sixth before the 19-year-old rookie soon overtook both the Marquez brothers to sit behind Martin. But as the race wore on, Acosta looked like he was struggling for grip and the experienced Marc – who had been conserving his tyres – took advantage to move up to fourth when the rookie went wide.
Acosta soon found himself going backwards as four more riders overtook him but he was still greeted by a happy pit crew who knew the teenager had given the MotoGP grid a glimpse of what the future could look like.
Earlier, the race was reduced to 21 laps after RaĂșl FernĂĄndez had an issue with his Trackhouse Racing bike just before the lights went out and the start was delayed after he refused to move it into the pit lane.
After technicians failed to get his machine going, FernĂĄndez was forced to sprint back to their garage to hop on a spare bike and start the race from the pit lane, but he was eventually forced to retire from the race – the only rider not to finish.