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Marc Marquez remains unbeaten sprint record in France

Marc Marquez remains unbeaten sprint record in France

The Advertiser10-05-2025

Ducati's Marc Marquez has become the first MotoGP rider to win six-straight sprints as the Spaniard maintained his perfect record in the shorter format at the French Grand Prix to retake the championship lead from his brother Alex.
Alex's Gresini Racing teammate and MotoGP rookie Fermin Aldeguer came third on Saturday for his first sprint podium while polesitter Fabio Quartararo could only manage fourth place at his home Grand Prix.
Alex came into the weekend with a one-point lead over Marc but after a sixth successive second-place finish in sprints, he is now two points behind his elder brother, who won by just over half a second.
Quartararo had entertained the home crowd as he pushed hard at the start, but the Yamaha rider could not sustain that pace as he lost out to the dominant Ducati machines in an all-Spanish podium.
"Fabio, in the start, was super fast, he was pushing a lot and then I said, 'Okay, I cannot follow that pace on the first two laps'," Marc Marquez said.
"But then I saw that he started to drop his pace a bit and then I felt better and better. In the last laps I was riding well, maybe the last lap I relaxed a bit too much, but I'm feeling good."
Frenchman Quartararo had taken pole when he smashed the lap record and he briefly lost the lead off the line before regaining it when Marc Marquez went wide on turn one amid loud cheers from the stands.
Ducati's Francesco Bagnaia, third in the riders' standings, lost a points-scoring opportunity when he crashed on lap two and is now 31 points behind his team mate.
Up front, Marc Marquez's red Ducati was all over the rear tyre of Quartararo's blue Yamaha and the pair swapped positions on lap six before the Spaniard took the lead and opened up a gap.
Within the space of two laps, Quartararo suddenly went from leading the sprint to falling to third when Alex lined up an overtake and shot past the Frenchman.
French fans experienced a roller-coaster of emotions as Quartararo battled Aldeguer for the final podium spot before the Gresini rider found a way through and held on for third place.
"I feel incredible! It's a dream for me to be here with top riders... We have the speed but we need more experience," Aldeguer said.
Australian Jack Miller finished 11th on his Pramac Yamaha some 12 seconds adrift of Marquez.
Ducati's Marc Marquez has become the first MotoGP rider to win six-straight sprints as the Spaniard maintained his perfect record in the shorter format at the French Grand Prix to retake the championship lead from his brother Alex.
Alex's Gresini Racing teammate and MotoGP rookie Fermin Aldeguer came third on Saturday for his first sprint podium while polesitter Fabio Quartararo could only manage fourth place at his home Grand Prix.
Alex came into the weekend with a one-point lead over Marc but after a sixth successive second-place finish in sprints, he is now two points behind his elder brother, who won by just over half a second.
Quartararo had entertained the home crowd as he pushed hard at the start, but the Yamaha rider could not sustain that pace as he lost out to the dominant Ducati machines in an all-Spanish podium.
"Fabio, in the start, was super fast, he was pushing a lot and then I said, 'Okay, I cannot follow that pace on the first two laps'," Marc Marquez said.
"But then I saw that he started to drop his pace a bit and then I felt better and better. In the last laps I was riding well, maybe the last lap I relaxed a bit too much, but I'm feeling good."
Frenchman Quartararo had taken pole when he smashed the lap record and he briefly lost the lead off the line before regaining it when Marc Marquez went wide on turn one amid loud cheers from the stands.
Ducati's Francesco Bagnaia, third in the riders' standings, lost a points-scoring opportunity when he crashed on lap two and is now 31 points behind his team mate.
Up front, Marc Marquez's red Ducati was all over the rear tyre of Quartararo's blue Yamaha and the pair swapped positions on lap six before the Spaniard took the lead and opened up a gap.
Within the space of two laps, Quartararo suddenly went from leading the sprint to falling to third when Alex lined up an overtake and shot past the Frenchman.
French fans experienced a roller-coaster of emotions as Quartararo battled Aldeguer for the final podium spot before the Gresini rider found a way through and held on for third place.
"I feel incredible! It's a dream for me to be here with top riders... We have the speed but we need more experience," Aldeguer said.
Australian Jack Miller finished 11th on his Pramac Yamaha some 12 seconds adrift of Marquez.
Ducati's Marc Marquez has become the first MotoGP rider to win six-straight sprints as the Spaniard maintained his perfect record in the shorter format at the French Grand Prix to retake the championship lead from his brother Alex.
Alex's Gresini Racing teammate and MotoGP rookie Fermin Aldeguer came third on Saturday for his first sprint podium while polesitter Fabio Quartararo could only manage fourth place at his home Grand Prix.
Alex came into the weekend with a one-point lead over Marc but after a sixth successive second-place finish in sprints, he is now two points behind his elder brother, who won by just over half a second.
Quartararo had entertained the home crowd as he pushed hard at the start, but the Yamaha rider could not sustain that pace as he lost out to the dominant Ducati machines in an all-Spanish podium.
"Fabio, in the start, was super fast, he was pushing a lot and then I said, 'Okay, I cannot follow that pace on the first two laps'," Marc Marquez said.
"But then I saw that he started to drop his pace a bit and then I felt better and better. In the last laps I was riding well, maybe the last lap I relaxed a bit too much, but I'm feeling good."
Frenchman Quartararo had taken pole when he smashed the lap record and he briefly lost the lead off the line before regaining it when Marc Marquez went wide on turn one amid loud cheers from the stands.
Ducati's Francesco Bagnaia, third in the riders' standings, lost a points-scoring opportunity when he crashed on lap two and is now 31 points behind his team mate.
Up front, Marc Marquez's red Ducati was all over the rear tyre of Quartararo's blue Yamaha and the pair swapped positions on lap six before the Spaniard took the lead and opened up a gap.
Within the space of two laps, Quartararo suddenly went from leading the sprint to falling to third when Alex lined up an overtake and shot past the Frenchman.
French fans experienced a roller-coaster of emotions as Quartararo battled Aldeguer for the final podium spot before the Gresini rider found a way through and held on for third place.
"I feel incredible! It's a dream for me to be here with top riders... We have the speed but we need more experience," Aldeguer said.
Australian Jack Miller finished 11th on his Pramac Yamaha some 12 seconds adrift of Marquez.
Ducati's Marc Marquez has become the first MotoGP rider to win six-straight sprints as the Spaniard maintained his perfect record in the shorter format at the French Grand Prix to retake the championship lead from his brother Alex.
Alex's Gresini Racing teammate and MotoGP rookie Fermin Aldeguer came third on Saturday for his first sprint podium while polesitter Fabio Quartararo could only manage fourth place at his home Grand Prix.
Alex came into the weekend with a one-point lead over Marc but after a sixth successive second-place finish in sprints, he is now two points behind his elder brother, who won by just over half a second.
Quartararo had entertained the home crowd as he pushed hard at the start, but the Yamaha rider could not sustain that pace as he lost out to the dominant Ducati machines in an all-Spanish podium.
"Fabio, in the start, was super fast, he was pushing a lot and then I said, 'Okay, I cannot follow that pace on the first two laps'," Marc Marquez said.
"But then I saw that he started to drop his pace a bit and then I felt better and better. In the last laps I was riding well, maybe the last lap I relaxed a bit too much, but I'm feeling good."
Frenchman Quartararo had taken pole when he smashed the lap record and he briefly lost the lead off the line before regaining it when Marc Marquez went wide on turn one amid loud cheers from the stands.
Ducati's Francesco Bagnaia, third in the riders' standings, lost a points-scoring opportunity when he crashed on lap two and is now 31 points behind his team mate.
Up front, Marc Marquez's red Ducati was all over the rear tyre of Quartararo's blue Yamaha and the pair swapped positions on lap six before the Spaniard took the lead and opened up a gap.
Within the space of two laps, Quartararo suddenly went from leading the sprint to falling to third when Alex lined up an overtake and shot past the Frenchman.
French fans experienced a roller-coaster of emotions as Quartararo battled Aldeguer for the final podium spot before the Gresini rider found a way through and held on for third place.
"I feel incredible! It's a dream for me to be here with top riders... We have the speed but we need more experience," Aldeguer said.
Australian Jack Miller finished 11th on his Pramac Yamaha some 12 seconds adrift of Marquez.

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Alcaraz reaches French Open final after Musetti retires
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Alcaraz reaches French Open final after Musetti retires

Defending champion Carlos Alcaraz has reached back-to-back French Open finals after Italian eighth seed Lorenzo Musetti retired with injury while trailing 4-6 7-6 (7-3) 6-0 2-0. Alcaraz is attempting to become only the third man to retain his Roland Garros title this century, after Rafa Nadal and Gustavo Kuerten, "It's never great to go through like this," Alcaraz said, before hailing Musetti's achievement of reaching at least the semi-finals of all four elite claycourt events this year. "He's a great player, he has had an incredible claycourt season ... I wish him a speedy recovery and I'm sure we'll be enjoying his tennis pretty soon." Musetti twice denied Alcaraz the chance to break in the opening nine games before the 23-year-old suddenly dialled up the intensity and snatched the opening set when his Spanish opponent produced errors in a poor service game. 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I wish him a speedy recovery and I'm sure we'll be enjoying his tennis pretty soon." Musetti twice denied Alcaraz the chance to break in the opening nine games before the 23-year-old suddenly dialled up the intensity and snatched the opening set when his Spanish opponent produced errors in a poor service game. A frustrated Alcaraz kicked his bench during the second set but finally found a way through Musetti's dogged defence to draw level after a tiebreak and then produced a dazzling display of power and precision to dish out a bagel in the third set. Musetti, who appeared to be hampered by a left thigh issue midway through the third set, threw in the towel after two games in the fourth. "The first two sets were tough. I had chances to be up in the match but couldn't make the most of them," Alcaraz added. "When I won the second set, I was relieved and I knew that I needed to be aggressive and be myself. I was calmer. 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Musetti, who appeared to be hampered by a left thigh issue midway through the third set, threw in the towel after two games in the fourth. "The first two sets were tough. I had chances to be up in the match but couldn't make the most of them," Alcaraz added. "When I won the second set, I was relieved and I knew that I needed to be aggressive and be myself. I was calmer. I could see clearer and I could play great tennis at the start of the third. "I'm feeling great physically. It's been three intense weeks but I have one more step to take. I'm playing great tennis and I have great confidence. I've been doing great things in this tournament and now is the time to give 100 per cent in the final." Alcaraz said he would tune into the second semi-final on Court Philippe Chatrier to watch world No.1 Jannik Sinner take on 24-time Grand Slam champion Novak Djokovic and study his opponent for Sunday's final. 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Musetti twice denied Alcaraz the chance to break in the opening nine games before the 23-year-old suddenly dialled up the intensity and snatched the opening set when his Spanish opponent produced errors in a poor service game. A frustrated Alcaraz kicked his bench during the second set but finally found a way through Musetti's dogged defence to draw level after a tiebreak and then produced a dazzling display of power and precision to dish out a bagel in the third set. Musetti, who appeared to be hampered by a left thigh issue midway through the third set, threw in the towel after two games in the fourth. "The first two sets were tough. I had chances to be up in the match but couldn't make the most of them," Alcaraz added. "When I won the second set, I was relieved and I knew that I needed to be aggressive and be myself. I was calmer. I could see clearer and I could play great tennis at the start of the third. "I'm feeling great physically. 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Alcaraz reaches French Open final after Musetti retires
Alcaraz reaches French Open final after Musetti retires

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Alcaraz reaches French Open final after Musetti retires
Alcaraz reaches French Open final after Musetti retires

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