Marc Marquez wins Aragon Grand Prix sprint ahead of brother Alex
Ducati's world championship leader Marc Marquez recovered from a poor start to win Saturday's sprint at the Aragon Grand Prix ahead of his brother Alex and Fermin Aldeguer of Gresini Racing.
Marc's seventh sprint victory of the season in eight rounds moved him 27 points clear of Alex in the championship, with the Ducati rider winning by more than two seconds.
South Africa's Brad Binder finished ninth.

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TimesLIVE
14 hours ago
- TimesLIVE
Marc Marquez wins Aragon Grand Prix sprint ahead of brother Alex
Ducati's world championship leader Marc Marquez recovered from a poor start to win Saturday's sprint at the Aragon Grand Prix ahead of his brother Alex and Fermin Aldeguer of Gresini Racing. Marc's seventh sprint victory of the season in eight rounds moved him 27 points clear of Alex in the championship, with the Ducati rider winning by more than two seconds. South Africa's Brad Binder finished ninth.

TimesLIVE
15 hours ago
- TimesLIVE
Marc Marquez takes pole position for Aragon Grand Prix
Ducati's Marc Marquez broke the lap record at the Aragon Grand Prix on Saturday to clinch the 99th pole position of his career and fifth of the season, pipping his brother Alex of Gresini Racing to top spot. Championship leader Marc set the early pace when he became the first rider to go under a minute and 46 seconds but the Spaniard was soon pushed down to third when Alex went fastest, followed by VR46 Racing's Franco Morbidelli. But Marc put his head down and produced an aggressive lap, with his red Ducati sliding around some of the curves as he clocked 1:45.704 seconds at the MotorLand circuit. "The first lap with the first tyre was clean. I just did one lap and then I stopped because I was already (one minute and) 45.9 without exaggerating, but then I exaggerated too much (on my next attempt)," Marc said. "(I was) trying to be too fast, even lost time. Of course, the riding style for the main race and the sprint is different, but the lap was not the smoothest lap of my life." Marc's fifth pole of the season put him in prime position to claim a record-extending seventh MotoGP victory at Aragon. His team mate Francesco Bagnaia also struggled with stability on his bike but managed to go fourth fastest while Red Bull KTM's factory team riders Pedro Acosta and Brad Binder will join him on the second row on Sunday.


Eyewitness News
29-05-2025
- Eyewitness News
Marc Marquez says Silverstone focus is protecting MotoGP lead
PARIS - After Johann Zarco ended a year of Ducati domination by surfing to victory in the rain at Le Mans, the spotlight returns to championship leader Marc Marquez at the British MotoGP this weekend. Marquez nursed his bike to second in the main race in France as his main title rivals, brother Alex and factory Ducati team-mate Francesco Bagnaia failed to score points. Marc Marquez leads his younger brother, who rides for Ducati satellite Gresini, by 22 points and Bagnaia, who also crashed in Saturday's sprint at Le Mans, by 51 points. "Le Mans was super tricky," Marquez said on Thursday. "On Sunday we took the correct decision to manage the risk and to finish the race because it was super easy to make a mistake." "I scored some very important points for the championship." Marquez has been in dominant form, winning three main races and all six sprints this season as he chases his seventh world title but his first since 2019. He has a reputation for a win-at-all-costs style but said that at Silverstone where he has only won once, back in 2014, the focus will be on his championship lead. "We will try first of all to score points. That is the most important thing. It is not one of the best circuits for me." While the forecast is for a relatively cool weekend in England, Marquez said he was happy that the only rain forecast is for Saturday's sprint. "When you are leading a championship you always prefer dry races because it means low risk," he said. For Bagnaia, the goal at Silverstone will be to avoid falling hopelessly behind his teammate. "The goal is to have more confidence in my front tyre so I can ride the way I want," said the Italian who won at Silverstone in 2022 on the way to the first of his two consecutive world titles. "I've always been very strong at Silverstone in recent years. I love the track and its atmosphere, and I can't wait to be back in the pits." Speculation swirled round Silverstone on Thursday over the future of one rider who has yet to win a point this season: reigning world champion Jorge Martin. After swapping, not necessarily of his own free will, his Ducati for an Aprilia during the off-season, the Spaniard has not competed in a single full Grand Prix this year following a string of injuries. He is reportedly thinking of leaving Aprilia at the end of the season, even though his contract runs until the end of 2026. 'I'M STILL HAPPY' Aprilia issued a statement on Thursday insisting that Martin's contract "must be respected by both parties". The Italian outfit said "it expects other teams to refrain from making any kind of offer to riders who are under contract." Meanwhile, Zarco said he was digesting his unexpected win in his home race. "I'm still happy," he said on Thursday. "When I rewatch the race, I see that everything happened so perfectly. "Watching it from home was strange because I was asking 'how did it happen' because always the race is so difficult and this one was not too difficult." Zarco's parents were at Le Mans to watch him become the first home rider to win the French Grand Prix sice 1954, but he said he was happy they would not be at Silverstone. "They stay home," he said. "My parents are not from the motorcycle world so I took care of them a lot. I wanted everything perfect for them. "It's pressure to take care of old people. So I'm feeling better alone here in Silverstone."