English Jake Dixon (Kalex) takes first ‘pole’ of the season At the Moto2 Catalan Grand Prix on the Barcelona/Catalonia circuit, he was the fastest in the official classification for the third time of his sports career.

Dixon was fastest in the category with a time of 1:44,089, adding his third ‘pole’ to his sports career after positions in Indonesia and the Netherlands last season.

World-leading Spanish Pedro ‘Shark’ Acosta (Kalex) managed to develop a mediocre performance and finished the race in ninth place. He had the best time and got into trouble for his closest rival for the title, twentieth Italian Tony Arbolino (Kalex).

Spanish Sergio García Dols (Kalex) was the first leader of the first Moto2 divisionWith a time of 1:44,873, Thailand’s Somkiat Chantra (Kalex) trailed him by 76th of a second (1:44,797) in just a few laps.

In the end, Chantra claimed that the record for moving to the second division was broken and they achieved this goal. Sergio Garcia DolsThings were complicated for the Italians as Czech Filip Salac and Belgian Barry Baltus were all on their way to Kalex. Tony Arbolino (Kalex).

The player, who is second in the World Cup standings twelve points behind Spaniard Pedro Acosta, will have to start from the twentieth place in the seventh place of the starting squad, which complicates his performance in Catalonia and forces him to both make a good game and comeback. Try to be on the side of the leading group.

Already in the second classification andIt took little time for Japanese Ai Ogura to rise to the top of the timelineIn his third lap, he broke the record with a time of 1:44,214 by a margin of one thousandth of a second. Albert Arenas (Kalex) at 56k, like Fermín Aldeguer (Boscoscuro) at 62k but still more than half a session left and the reaction of world championship leader Pedro Acosta, who was twelfth at the time, was expected.

In the final episode, both Jake Dixon (Kalex) 1:44.089 and Arón Canet (Kalex) dropped the Japanese bests of 1:44.184, followed by Albert Arenas (Kalex). Fermin Aldeguer and behind them was Pedro Acosta, who struggled to improve his position in the starting squad knowing that his nearest competitor was far behind.

No one can break Dixon’s recordHe beat Canet by 95 thousandths of a second and Japanese Ogura by 125 thousandths.

Fourth place was taken by ‘Manugas’ González, his best-ever Moto2 world championship classification, ahead of Albert Arenas and Fermín Aldeguer.Alonso López (Boscoscuro), Sergio García Dols and Pedro Acosta are third in the starting lineup, both equal to one thousandth of a second.

Thai Somkiat Chantra (Kalex) was twelfth, followed by Czech Filip Salac, Jeremy Alcoba (Kalex) sixteenth and Marcos Ramírez (Kalex) eighteenth.