MotoGP 2018 Losail Results

Bruce Allen
by Bruce Allen

DesmoDovi Punks Marquez for Early Season Lead

The season opener at Losail went mostly according to expectations, which is to say it was crowded up front. At one point I counted nine bikes in the lead group, a sight normally seen in Moto3. French sophomore Johann Zarco led from pole most of the day, fueling a lot of premature trash talk. Once his tires went up, though, it came down to Andrea Dovizioso and Marc Marquez for early bragging rights. Round One goes to the Italian on points. No TKO.

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Andrea Dovizioso took the 2018 season opener by just 0.027 seconds over Marc Marquez with Valentino Rossi also finishing within a second behind to claim third.

Practice and Qualifying

Of the top ten riders on the combined practice timesheets, the top five included, as most of you know, three Ducatis and both Suzukis. The factory Hondas sat 6th and 7th. Cal Crutchlow, Valentino Rossi and Zarco also made it straight into Q2, wiping up the rear, as it were. Jack Miller got hot on his Desmosedici GP17 during Q1 and moved through to Q2, followed by Maverick Viñales, who also found something late in the day. Both appeared to be capable of making noise in Q2. Overall, Dovizioso led three of the four practice sessions (Zarco the other), topping the charts for the Q2 cabal. KTM had nothing going on, but Aprilia was showing signs of life, Aleix Espargaro sitting 12th after FP3.

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Last season’s Rookie of the Year, Johann Zarco showed his success was no fluke, taking the pole at Qatar with a record laptime of 1:53.680.

Q2 was seriously better than a lot of races. Fifteen minutes of straight adrenaline, with the last three minutes simply breathtaking. Riders including Dovi, Marquez, Jorge Lorenzo and Alex Rins took turns aiming at the 10-year old track record set by Lorenzo as a white-hot rookie to open the 2008 season, falling short each time. But on the day’s last lap, the remarkable Johann Zarco, who we refuse to call The Flying Frenchman, pedaling his two-year old Yamaha, put down a vapor trail, crushing Lorenzo’s former record by 2½ tenths and substantially raising the price of poker in the Zarco contract sweepstakes for 2019-20. Not to mention administering a facial to factory riders Rossi (8th) and Viñales (12th). “Hey Johann, it’s that Honda guy again on line 2.”

Marquez and Danilo Petrucci, as expected, ended Q2 second and third, respectively, both also breaking the previous record. My pick for pole, Dovizioso, held it for quite some time before sagging to the middle of the second row during the final two minutes. Interesting that the first two rows of riders, all of whom appear capable of winning on Sunday, exclude three genuine Aliens – Lorenzo, Rossi and Viñales. As Steven Stills sang eons ago, “There’s something happening here.” Several weeks ago we suggested “track records appear set to fall like dominos.” Even without qualifying tires.

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Danilo Petrucci was also flying during qualifying, earning a start on the front row.

Batting a thousand so far on that one. [And can’t you still hear the separate guitar parts in “For What It’s Worth?” Boom.] Saturday evening, Zarco said his race pace was a concern. Right. I hope everyone got to watch the interview with Marc Marquez in which the clever young Brit interviewer managed to get him to admit, smiling widely, that tire selection for the race is very important and no, we are not yet sure which tires we will use tomorrow. Wow. We journalists really get down to it sometimes.

A Race for the Ages

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Johann Zarco took the early lead but was unable to maintain that pace as his tires wore down.

The 2018 Qatar Motorcycle Grand Prix unfolded as if it had been scripted. The hot French sophomore on the two-year old Yamaha – let’s call him Johann Zarco – took the hole shot from pole and led a snappish bunch of veteran riders on a merry chase for 16 laps. Suddenly, his tires turned to cheese, and those veterans began going through, Sherman-through-Georgia style. Both Dovizioso and Marquez passed through at Turn 1 of Lap 17, with Rossi following suit later in the lap. Ultimately, Cal Crutchlow, Danilo Petrucci, Maverick Viñales and Dani Pedrosa would push the impudent Gaul to 8th place. In golf they say you drive for show, putt for dough. In MotoGP, you gotta save some tire for late in the race.

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Andrea Dovizioso and Marc Marquez continued their duel from last season at Losail.

It was on Lap 21 that the contenders stepped in for the pretenders. Andrea Dovizioso, who had seized the lead on Lap 17, invited Marquez to a private tête-à-tête for the last three laps, an invitation the defending champion eagerly accepted. With Rossi reduced to lurking in 3rd, hoping for something to go wrong in front of him, the two best riders on Earth squared off for six minutes of unbridled, hair-raising battle, exchanging haymakers. Marquez, unable to not make a move on Dovi at some point, finally took his shot at Turn 16 on the final lap, in a virtual replay of the Red Bull Ring and Motegi duels the two fought last year. Consistent with those contests, Dovi took advantage of his superior corner exit speed to clip Marquez by 2/100ths of a second and take a narrow early lead in the 2018 title chase.

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The wily veteran Valentino Rossi shows Marc Marquez and Andrea Dovizioso the proper technique of holding your helmet, energy drink sponsor and trophy at the same time.

Some Days Chicken, Some Days Feathers

In addition to Dovizioso and Marquez, riders who could anticipate a tasty chicken dinner this evening include Rossi, who did manage to climb from 8th to 3rd, and Franco Morbidelli, who edged Hafizh Syahrin for the top rookie participation trophy. Syahrin, for his part, became the first Malaysian rider ever to start a MotoGP race and score points therein, a record he can never lose. Kudos to the luckiest rider on the grid. Jack Miller and Tito Rabat probably feel pretty good this evening, crossing the line in 10th and 11th places, respectively.

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What a whirlwind couple of weeks it’s been for Hafizh Syahrin. It was just less than a month ago that Syahrin was named to replace Jonas Fogler with Tech 3, and now he’s the first Malaysian rider to ever start a MotoGP race.

Riders going hungry tonight include Alex Rins, Jorge Lorenzo and Pol Espargaro, all of whom crashed out, Rins while traveling in 6th position. Zarco learned a lesson today. Maverick Viñales learned his lesson yesterday while laying an egg in Q2, starting from 12th place. He rode a hellified second half today, only to end up 6th. Not a disaster, but an opportunity lost. Scott Redding, who has apparently already lost his seat for next year to Danilo Petrucci, can say only that he managed to beat Xavier Simeon, a feat comparable to winning the Taller than Mickey Rooney contest.

Alex Rins looked to get a good start to the season after an injury-plagued 2017. Rins stayed with the race leaders until he lost the front on the second corner with 10 laps to go.

Over in the Junior Leagues

Spaniard Jorge Martin stiff-armed countryman Aron Canet for the win in the Moto3 race, with the new guy at Leopard Racing, Lorenzo Dalla Porta, glomming onto the third podium spot milliseconds ahead of about six other guys. Enea Bastianini, taking over the #1 seat at Leopard with the graduation of 2017 champion Joan Mir to Moto2, crashed out of a podium spot, giving an ominous start to his 2018 campaign.

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Pecco Bagnaia took the first Moto2 race in another close finish. All three race winners won by less than two hundredths of a second.

Pecco Bagnaia, late of the SKY Racing Team VR46, held on to the Moto2 win today, narrowly evading the clutches of Lorenzo Baldassarri, in a thrilling contest that also came down to the last turn. Little Brother Alex Marquez, who had been fast all weekend, started from pole and was cruising along in 3rd position, well within reach of the leaders, when his rear brakes pinched the disc and, inexplicably, held on, at which point the disc quickly cooked, changed color from gray to red to white, back to gray when they finally came unstuck, killing his chances for the win but allowing him a podium nonetheless.

Unsubstantiated Rumors

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Valentino Rossi signed a two-year contract extension with Yamaha ahead of the Qatar round.

Bagnaia, according to news reports, has already signed a contract to join Jack Miller with Alma Pramac Ducati next season. The dominoes look set to fall such that Petrucci heads over to Gresini Aprilia, and Redding for points west. Apparently Honda has the early inside track to sign Zarco to the factory team to ride alongside Marquez starting next year, with Pedrosa being shown the door, as feared. Earliest silly season I can ever remember. Rossi signed for two more years last week, in case you’ve been hanging out under a rock.

Rider Rankings After Round One

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Though he finished behind Dovizioso, Marc Marquez remains at the front of Tranch 1 in Bruce Allen’s rider rankings.

Tranche 1: Marquez, Dovizioso, Rossi, Petrucci, Crutchlow
Tranche 2: Viñales, Zarco, Rins, Pedrosa, Miller
Tranche 3: Lorenzo, Iannone, Syahrin, A. Espargaro, Morbidelli
Tranche 4: P. Espargaro, Abraham, Bautista, Rabat
Tranche 5: Simeon, Redding, Nakagami, Smith, Luthi

Before you take to DISQUS to shred my rankings, remember Allen’s Corollary to Newton’s Third Law: For every action, there is an equal and opposite criticism.

Argentina in two weeks. Be there.

2018 MotoGP Qatar Results

Pos.

RiderTeamTime

1

Andrea DoviziosoDucati Corse42:34.654

2

Marc MarquezRepsol Honda+0.027

3

Valentino RossiMovistar Yamaha+0.797

4

Cal CrutchlowLCR Honda Castrol+2.881

5

Danilo PetrucciAlma Pramac Ducati+3.821

6

Maverick ViñalesMovistar Yamaha+3.888

7

Dani PedrosaRepsol Honda+4.621

8

Johann ZarcoMonster Yamaha Tech 3+7.112

9

Andrea IannoneSuzuki Ecstar+12.957

10

Jack MillerAlma Pramac Ducati+14.594

11

Tito RabatReale Avintia Ducati+15.181

12

Franco MorbidelliEstrella Galicia 0,0 Marc VDS Honda+16.274

13

Alvaro BautistaAngel Nieto Ducati+19.788

14

Hafizh SyahrinMonster Yamaha Tech3+20.299

15

Karel AbrahamAngel Nieto Ducati+23.287

16

Thomas LuthiEstrella Galicia 0,0 Marc VDS Honda+24.189

17

Takaaki NakagamiLCR Honda Idemitsu+24.554

18

Bradley SmithRed Bull KTM+31.704

19

Aleix EspargaroAprilia Gresini+34.712

20

Scott ReddingAprilia Gresini+37.641

21

Xavier SimeonReale Avintia Ducati+46.706

Not Classified

DNF

Pol EspargaroRed Bull KTM7 Laps

DNF

Alex RinsSuzuki Ecstar10 Laps

DNF

Jorge LorenzoDucati Corse10 Laps

2018 MotoGP Top 10 Standings After 1 Round

Pos.

RiderMotorcyclePoints

1

Andrea DoviziosoDucati Corse25

2

Marc MarquezRepsol Honda20

3

Valentino RossiMovistar Yamaha16

4

Cal CrutchlowLCR Honda Castrol13

5

Danilo PetrucciAlma Pramac Ducati11

6

Maverick ViñalesMovistar Yamaha10

7

Dani PedrosaRepsol Honda9

8

Johann ZarcoMonster Yamaha Tech 38

9

Andrea IannoneSuzuki Ecstar7

10

Jack MillerAlma Pramac Ducati6
Bruce Allen
Bruce Allen

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  • Kos Kos on Mar 23, 2018

    Late to the party. Just got to watch the ridiculously shortened non-live version (damn you, Bein!). I think it might have been 12 minutes long.

    Another interesting read Bruce. I hope this season's raise was substantial! An article idea for you: Explain, with humor, the qualifying process. Okay......

    Is the only thing missing from FF's arsenal the ability to manage tires? Which may not have mattered in the lesser leagues (LLs). I guess the real question is whether he could win on a NEW Yamaha!

    Since it's late, and nobody cares about this race anymore, I'll sign off with GO ROSSI, who asks me to pass on his comment that "I'm not dead yet!".

  • Spiff Spiff on Mar 24, 2018

    Okay here it is, :) 2019 KTM. Factory: Pol and Pedrosa. Tech3: Killio and Aleix.

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