MotoGP 2023 Round 14 – Motegi

A race, a parade, and a cluster

Psychedelia from the Japanese Grand Prix

From my limited perspective–the kitchen table at my home in Indiana–it was an enjoyable last weekend in September/first weekend in October as MotoGP arrived in The Land of the Rising Sun. Something for every taste and budget, as it were. In the premier class, young Jorge Martin continued his assault on the 2023 title, elbowing his way to pole, another Sprint win, and being declared the winner of the red-flagged main event on Sunday. Somkiat Chantra led an Idimetsu Honda Team Asia 1-2 in an increasingly familiar Moto2 parade. My boy Jaume Masia won again in a tightly contested Moto3 tilt with the lightweight title chase tighter than bark on a tree.

The MotoGP race itself was a portrait of disorder at the start. The clouds and humidity which featured all weekend finally gave way to rain five minutes before the start, with all riders on slicks. Well, not ALL riders, as Luca Marini and Alex Marquez were absent, nursing injuries received in the Buddh steam bath last week. Anyway, when the red lights went out, the grid departed their starting spots as if they were skating on black ice, and the wet race white flags came out on Lap 1. All the serious riders immediately entered the pits, leaving Fabio Quartararo, Michele Pirro, Stefan Bradl, Franco Morbidelli and Cal Crutchlow circulating on their way to complete irrelevance on slicks, gambling with nothing to lose that the rain might suddenly, unexpectedly quit. Check the standings at the end of Lap 1–you’ll never see those numbers at the top again.

Martin occupied P4 at the end of Lap 2. By Lap 6, in the driving rain, he had sliced through the top of the order into P1 where he stayed through the end of Lap 12, at which point the race was red-flagged. Although a restart was possible, the conditions failed to improve sufficiently to allow it, probably to the relief of the riders. And so Pecco Bagnaia’s lead in the 2023 title chase was cut from 13 points on Friday to three points on Sunday evening. Marco Bezzecchi trails Martin by 48 with Brad Binder, who crashed today and gutted my fantasy team, another 13 points back, but still in it by my reckoning, with the nasty, life-threatening part of the schedule starting in less than two weeks.

Still no announcement as to Marc Marquez’ plans for 2024, despite assurances that they would be revealed by this weekend. Ditto for Pedro Acosta, as there is now some doubt that he will get his ticket punched for MotoGP next season. A bunch of riders will be getting promoted from Moto3 to Moto2 next year, as per usual. We took issue with the provisional 2024 calendar elsewhere this weekend, even before we become fully immersed in the brutal piece of the 2023 schedule starting next time out in Indonesia, where afternoon temps are reliably in the 90’s and the humidity is like a wet towel. As one of our faithful readers commented concerning the riders and their attitudes toward the killer schedule, beatings will continue until morale improves.

Come back for more in two weeks.

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6 Responses to “MotoGP 2023 Round 14 – Motegi”

  1. Anonymous Says:

    I think Antman is actually going to Gresini. Hard to believe. Big pay cut incoming. That’s motivation. He still wants that 10th to at least equal his nemesis The Yellow One as GOAT.

    As for the race

    Liked by 1 person

  2. Anonymous Says:

    Uggh, I had Zarco and Vinales, neither of which scored in fantasy racing. Sucky. That was some wet racing. Martin looked pretty shocked he’d won the race when they called it after 12 laps.

    Liked by 1 person

  3. Anonymous Says:

    Bruce your lead was short-lived. I was just toying with you. I had MM as a silver and he came through. My other silver was Rins who bailed out. I thought about using my final bonus on Jorge (and should have) but it’s hard to predict these non-euro rounds.

    I’ll be making arrangements for Austin soon.

    Liked by 1 person

  4. Buzz Says:

    I swear I typed a comment but I messed up I guess. I was just gloating over my #1 position. Bruce’s rightful place was only a week. 

    It took half a season to figure out how to switch riders and how the bonus worked. I picked MM as a Silver rider and he got a podium for me. 

    Liked by 1 person

  5. Anonymous Says:

    Someone more cynical than I could make a case that the race was called in order to ensure that Honda scored a podium position.

    Liked by 1 person

  6. Anonymous Says:

    I have a fantasy team running on a small motorcycling community site, with my team comprised of Bagnaia, Miller, and Zarco. For a while this season I was looking like a genius, but my team has imploded and is looking dire. Martin has the feel of inevitability and Bagnaia is riding on eggshells. Zarco had mentally moved on, and Miller – well, I don’t know what is happening with Miller. The news that Marc Marquez is moving to Gresini Ducati is anti-climactic, but that he will be on this years Ducati next year is surprising. Wouldn’t it have been cool for him to join Rossi’s team? That would have made my year. 

    Liked by 1 person

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