italian pilot Enea Bastianini (Ducati) wins epic MotoGP race After the Aragon Grand Prix, the fifteenth round of the Motorcycle World Championship pass his fellow countryman in the last round Francesco Bagnaia (Ducati), with the Spaniards Alex Espargaro (April) puts pressure on leader Fabio Quartararo (Yamaha), who suffered a hard crash after colliding with Marc Márquez (Repsol Honda), who had to retire on his return to the World Championship.

‘The Beast’ waited until the last turn on the corner before ‘The Turquoise’Putting the bike on ‘Pecco’, getting the fourth win of the year with an advantage of 42 thousand against him, finishing the race that started with a double fear with a heartbreaking end.

On his return to the championship after his fourth humeral operation, Márquez advanced from thirteenth to sixth place before his first corner, outstripping Quartararo. The one from Nice was behind the wheel of the Catalan in Turn 3 when everything blew up; marquez A ‘high side’ was about to suffer and the Frenchman’s motorcycle crashed on him, an action that resulted in the championship leader hitting the ground..

With the bike damaged, the eighth champion was still involved in a recent incident when, after two corners, before reaching the ‘Corkscrew’, Japanese Takaaki Nakagami (Honda) collided with his bike and was left lying somewhere in the middle of the track. A very dangerous act that Maverick Viñales (Aprilia) manages to evade.

Despite his ‘zero’, he continues to rule the general from Nice (211), but now ‘Pecco’ has just ten rental points over Bagnaia and 17 over Aleix Espargaró, who is fully engaged in the title fight. The Catalan took the podium with two laps left on the checkered flag after beating South African Brad Binder (KTM).

Among the rest of the Spaniards, Jorge Martín (Ducati) finished sixth, Alex Rins (Suzuki) ninth, Alex Márquez (Honda) twelfth, ahead of Maverick Viñales (Aprilia), Pol Espargaró (Repsol Honda) fifteenth, and Raúl Fernández (KTM) twentieth .

MotoGP standings after Aragon GP:

  1. Fabio Quartararo – Yamaha – 211

  2. Francesco Bagnaia – Ducati – 201

  3. Aleix Espargaro – Aprilia – 194

  4. Enea Bastianini – Ducati – 163

  5. Jack Miller – Ducati – 134

  6. Johann Zarco – Ducati – 133

  7. Brad Connector – KTM – 128

  8. Alex Rins – Suzuki – 108

  9. Jorge Martin – Ducati – 104

  10. Maverick Vinales – 104