Italian MotoGP: Márquez the machine monopolises Mugello

MotoGP

Marc Márquez has found his stride on Ducati's tricky GP25, the all-in 24/7 racing machine almost making it look easy at Mugello, where team-mate Pecco Bagnaia admitted it's impossible to think about winning the championship

Marquez leads the start from Bagnaia, who is about to pounce to kick off a spectacular battle which lasted until quarter distance

Márquez leads the start from Bagnaia, who is about to pounce to kick off a spectacular battle which lasted until quarter distance

Michelin

The last time Marc Márquez won a race at Mugello was 11 years ago, when he was joined on the podium by Valentino Rossi and Jorge Lorenzo. Mugello is a fast, flowing circuit, which doesn’t allow the six-time MotoGP champion to use his killer skill: hammering into corners hard on the brakes.

But that doesn’t matter anymore, because Márquez can show his speed in different ways with Ducati’s Desmosedici, a more rounded motorcycle than the Honda RC213V he rode from 2013 to 2023.

Márquez’s fifth grand prix victory and sixth sprint win from the first nine rounds of 2025 were his most important successes of the year so far, because he had expected much stronger challenges from team-mate Pecco Bagnaia and brother Alex, who both like the epic Italian venue more than he does.

Instead he won both races at a canter, moving into the lead, building a buffer, then controlling the gap to extend his championship lead over his brother to 40 points.

And yet even after his sprint victory he insisted that he was in defence mode.

“I’m trying not to lose points,” he said.

Then he was asked how this could be after what he’d just done on the track.

“Before starting this GP I had one mentality and during a GP I cannot change my mentality,” he replied. “It means we need to be realistic. If for some reason Pecco or Alex are super-fast on Sunday I need to accept it and take points. I feel in good form but this is not a circuit to attack. Today we were able to attack and we will try tomorrow if we are able.”

His Mugello walkover – pole position with a qualifying record plus sprint and GP wins – was also important for the numbers. On Saturday Márquez became the first rider in eight decades of world championship racing to score a hundred poles. And Sunday’s victory was MM93’s 93rd, which also takes him to within one premier-class success of eight-time MotoGP king Giacomo Agostini, who stands second in the all-time winners league behind Valentino Rossi.

Ducati Corse boss Gigi Dall’Igna embraces Marquez – without him the factory team would once again be facing title defeat at the hands of an independent tea

Ducati Corse boss Gigi Dall’Igna embraces Marquez – without him the factory team would once again be facing title defeat at the hands of an independent tea

These numbers highlight an extraordinary talent who has been to hell and back in recent years, following the arm injury which took him to the verge of retirement. Who knows where he would be in the winners league if hadn’t spent three years mostly under the surgeon’s knife.

Márquez isn’t only hugely talented and hugely determined, he’s also very clever. He’s an all-in 24/7 racing machine who’s always racing, whether he’s on the track or not.

The 32-year-old knows very well that utterly dominating Mugello wouldn’t only batter the morale of his team-mate, who reigned supreme there in 2023 and 2024, it would also pain his old rival Rossi, who last year reignited their ancient feud and was surely hoping his protégé Bagnaia would at least defeat Márquez in a VR46 heartland.

The wounds of 2015 festered all weekend, with a fair few fans booing Márquez, much to the disgust of the factory Ducati team and especially team manager Davide Tardozzi, who stood before the main grandstand following the sprint, arguing with anyone who dared voice their dislike of Ducati’s new star.

“To hear what I heard yesterday wasn’t good,” said Tardozzi on Sunday.

Márquez’s sprint victory was so complete that it left little doubt about the outcome of the main race. In a rare lapse, he turned off his launch control on the way to the sprint grid, so when the lights went out he was still fussing with his launch-control button. Down in eighth place in the charge to the first corner, he finished the first lap in third, took the lead on lap four and beat his brother by 1.4 seconds, with Bagnaia a further second down.

Both Alex and Bagnaia gave him a hard time in the first few laps of Sunday’s GP but as soon as he got serious it was game over.

Márquez may already have won five GPs but he’s also crashed in three, so he’s had to think hard about what he’s doing during the first few laps, which caught him out at Jerez and Silverstone.

The fact that he now knows what to do is ominous for his rivals.

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Marc Márquez got muddled with his launch-control button (arrowed) before the sprint, leaving himself eighth on the charge into the first corner

Mat Oxley

Márquez no longer rides at his maximum in the early stages because it’s too risky – when his tyres are new the rear has so much grip that it takes away grip from the front. So he has adapted his strategy and riding technique to get around this tricky issue – he has refined what he does in corner entry and knows he must wait until the rear loses a little grip, which makes the bike more balanced, before he starts to really push.

“The team is trying to help me understand the first laps with new tyres but in the end the rider is the one that can make the biggest difference,” he said. “So I’ve adapted my riding style to try to be more focused in the very last part of corner entry, which is where I normally crash with new tyres…”

The first quarter of the race was spectacular, as the three Ducati riders swapped both the lead and paint, Bagnaia lucky to survive a heavy impact when his front tyre tagged Márquez’s rear tyre. Afterwards both factory riders were summoned to Race Direction to discuss these moments but all was deemed okay.

“I was breathing more than normal [during the three-way fight],” added Márquez. “I was repeating in my mind, the race is super long, the race is super long!”

Would this be the moment Bagnaia fully engaged with his new team-mate for the first time? Not really, because the early laps were a bit of a mirage. While Márquez was waiting for his rear to lose grip, Bagnaia was making hay, before his front lost grip. After the sprint he said his front tyre had lasted five laps and he expected the same in the main event.

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Di Giannantonio was rightly delighted with his first MotoGP podium at Mugello

VR46

“I was feeling good, then after six laps the front started to drop, so I had to slow down because I was risking a crash,” said the Italian, who had a big moment on lap six. “I was almost on the ground at the last corner, just trying to do the same line as I used to.”

Bagnaia has been battling this problem all season – the front of his GP25 won’t do what he wants it, so he’s locking and losing the front into corners, then overusing the tyre, trying to get the bike turned.

And there’s no sign of him turning the corner, literally or metaphorically.

His misbehaving GP25 was at its worst braking from 225mph into Turn 1, where he couldn’t do what he did last year – kick the rear tyre sideways to help him take some load off the front tyre. Whenever he tried to do that on Sunday the rear stepped out, then snapped violently back into line, leaving him teetering on the edge of disaster.

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“This season I can’t do controlled slides,” he added. “And I cannot brake with the bike inline like Marc, because if I do that I lose the front, so I’m in limbo. The rear is always sliding and there’s a lot of shaking.”

These issues also overused Bagnaia’s rear tyre, so in the closing stages he was easy prey for a hard-charging Fabio Di Giannantonio.

“The last laps I had too much vibration from the rear, so I had to slow down more – there was a hole in my rear tyre because it was very used.”

Bagnaia had expected so much better at Mugello in front of his home fans. Instead his fourth place convinced him his title hopes are over, unless Ducati find a magic fix.

“Like this, it’s impossible to think about winning the championship,” he said.

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Viñales and Binder both had new seat aero at Mugello, similar in style to the first seat winglets introduced by Ducati three years ago

Mat Oxley

Alex had also gone into the weekend hoping he could take a few points out of his brother’s championship advantage. And he did lead Sunday’s race for three laps aboard his GP24.

“I knew this track was a good opportunity to score more points than him but he was better than us,” he said.

Márquez the elder regained the lead on lap nine and that was that.

Ducati’s third GP25 rider Di Giannantonio has also struggled with the bike, going well at some tracks and not so well at others. Mugello was one of the good ones – and no doubt that gave his team owner a glimmer of a smile.

“You grow up watching MotoGP races at Mugello – Vale [Rossi], Capirex [Loris Capirossi] and [Max] Biaggi on the podium, so it’s a dream,” said Di Giannantonio after his second Sunday podium of 2025. “When I was fourth, I kept saying to myself, not P4! Not P4! I gave everything and it paid off. It’s fantastic how we are coming back to the top form we lost at the last few GPs. Now we want to close the gap with these guys in front.”

Sunday’s surprise was Maverick Viñales, who was inching towards the podium group when he got bulldozered by Di Giannantonio’s team-mate Franco Morbidelli. A long-lap penalty seemed like a weak punishment for such a move.

Viñales was full of rage immediately after the incident but later professed delight at the performance of his Tech 3 KTM RC16.

“We were fighting with the Ducatis at their home track, so that’s really good,” he said. “I have a really good feeling because this was the first time I was at the front and saving tyres, so that’s a really good sign.”

KTM made its first big change of seat aero in a long time at Mugello, with Viñales and Brad Binder using Ducati-style winglets and Pedro Acosta running no seat aero at all.

“Now we are a little closer after the modification to our aero spec,” Viñales added. “We are good in corners where you only have to roll the throttle and keep the bike rolling, like Arrabbiata 1 and 2 and Turns 5 and 7. But in corners where you need to keep the brake, like Turn 12 and the last corner, the Ducati seem easier – when they release the front brake, they turn a bit easier and they can keep a lot of corner speed.”

KTM still has plenty of work to do to catch Ducati. Then it will have to catch Marc Márquez on a Ducati. Two very different things.

Aprilia had another so-so weekend, Marco Bezzecchi fighting an unstable RS-GP to come home fifth, nine seconds down on the winner. Honda and Yamaha both had a grim time, the RC213V lacking edge grip and on-throttle turning through Mugello’s many sweeping corners, while Yamaha’s YZR-M1 caught a rare dose of chatter.

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