Fellow RC16 riders Enea Bastianini and Brad Binder were also revitalised, taking their best results so far this year in fifth and seventh. Both were spectacular to watch, backing into corners much more than usual — Binder’s preferred style — because the less grippy rear tyre allowed them to do this.
Rookie Fermin Aldeguer took his first dry-race MotoGP podium with a storming ride to second place, which put winner Marc Márquez under pressure in the final stages.
The Gresini Ducati rider came through from eighth on the first lap to fifth at half distance, 3.8 seconds off the lead. From there he charged past Acosta, Bagnaia and Bezzecchi to close to within seven-tenths of Márquez. For several laps he was the fastest man on track, until Márquez got the hurry up from his team and increased his pace.
This shouldn’t have come as a surprise – Ducati signed the teenager after the 2023 Moto2 season after a series of impressive performances.
“We saw his talent and his feet on the ground,” said factory team manager Davide Tardozzi on Sunday. “And he is very young, so he has huge room for improvement.”
Aldeguer is the youngest rider on the grid. He celebrated his 20th birthday in April, which means he was born a few days before Valentino Rossi won the 2005 Spanish GP at Jerez!
Aprilia’s RS-GP at Red Bull Ring – this is one of Martin’s bikes
Oxley
“I don’t even know how I did it,” said the Spaniard. “There are those days in which you take to the track and everything works perfectly. I had the perfect feeling from the get-go and the more I rode, the faster I got. I managed the rear tyre very well so I arrived at the last laps with something more, I am very clean with the throttle.”
“Fermin uses a lot of corner speed,” explained Márquez, who helps his young compatriot with advice. “This works well with this special tyre.”
Márquez wasn’t wrong. Aldeguer was the fastest of the podium finishers through Red Bull Ring’s third sector, which includes the circuit’s only real left-handers, Turns 6 and 7. Last year Aldeguer was super-slow through this section in Moto2, so he’s obviously learning a lot, especially from crew chief Frankie Carchedi, who last year worked with Márquez, the turn-left king.
“I saw Marco’s bike snaking a bit, then I attacked”
Alex Márquez had a horrible Sunday, finishing the race in tenth. His long-lap penalty – for taking out Joan Mir at Brno – dropped him deep into the jungle and he was unable to extricate himself. It’s the usual problem of modern MotoGP pack racing – your front tyre overheats and loses grip and the aero effect and aero draft make it difficult to plan and execute overtakes.
The younger Márquez remains second overall, 142 points — or 3.8 GPs — behind his brother, who once again had everything in control for his 24th consecutive victory: 12 GPs and 12 sprints.
The 32-year-old is a step or three above everyone else on the grid. On Sunday he employed his usual strategy when he doesn’t get the holeshot. He had qualified fourth — his third time off the front row this year, after he fell in Q2 — and although he was second on the second lap he couldn’t get close enough to Bezzecchi to launch an attack.
By one-third distance he had closed the gap to less than two-tenths, but his front tyre overheated in the Aprilia’s wake, so he dropped back a few tenths to do the usual: wait until the tyres dropped…
“I saw Marco’s bike snaking a bit, then I attacked,” said Márquez, who is now three victories away from his 100th GP win, across all classes.
Bastianini (23) was getting gloriously sideways on his KTM
Tech 3 Dorna/MotoGP
This was also his first Red Bull Ring victory. He lost the Austrian GP by a fraction three years in a row – 2017, 2018 and 2019 – when he was at Honda, beaten at the last corner by Ducati riders Andrea Dovizioso and Jorge Lorenzo.
“Now I am on the red bike,” he grinned before practice was underway.
Twice MotoGP world champion Casey Stoner was at Red Bull Ring and explained the difference between Márquez and the others.
“While everyone else relies on the TC [traction control], Marc rides a little ahead of it, which gives him a bit extra as the race goes on,” said the Aussie. “It’s his sensitivity for the throttle. And his feeling for the front is phenomenal.”