MotoGP 2023 Round 15 – Mandalika

Bagnaia retakes the lead after Martin chokes

By now, I assume everyone reading this has either seen the race or read about the results. Jorge Martin took over the lead in the 2023 title chase for roughly 24 hours, winning yet another Saturday Sprint before an unlikely/uncharacteristic/unforced error while leading comfortably on Lap 13 forced him out of the grand prix. Pecco Bagnaia overcame a P13 start to win the main event on Sunday after a two point Saturday.

  • KTM tough guy Brad Binder knocked polesitter Luca Marini out of Sunday’s race, did the same to Miguel Oliveira some nine laps later, served two long lap penalties and still managed a P6 finish.
  • Alex Marquez sat out nursing his four broken ribs while Alex Rins raced with two barely-knitted leg bones and saw the checkered flag.
  • Maverick Vinales led much of the main event until his soft rear tire turned to queso midway through the race before finishing in P4.
  • Marini and Bezzecchi, with, as Louis Suddeby pointed out, “two fully functional collarbones between them” both finished on the podium on Saturday. Both looked good for a while on Sunday; Marini got clattered by Binder on Lap 4, and Bezzecchi flirted with the podium for most of the day until he tired at the end, finishing in P5.
  • Bagnaia’s win marked the first time in 17 years a rider starting lower than P12 won a grand prix. Um, that would have been Marco Melandri at Phillip Island in 2006.
  • Due to the painful attrition in the main event, Franco Morbidelli scored two championship points despite finishing four (4) laps down. And this guy earned a Ducati ride for next year?
  • Assuming the championship is decided again this year before the Valencia round in November, the most interesting part of the visit to eastern Spain will be watching Marc Marquez getting acquainted with the Ducati Desmosedici during the post-race test.
  • The new tire pressure regulations have now placed five riders on a bubble. Maverick Vinales ran afoul of the regs in Barcelona. On Sunday, four more riders–Bezzecchi, Aleix, Morbidelli and Raul Fernandez–recorded their first violations of this senseless rule. Meaning all five are at risk of a three-second penalty on the next occurrence. For Bezz and Aleix, this could have some meaning. But MotoGP needs to make up its mind. Enforcing such a rule while allowing ride height devices and advanced aero wings pretty much guarantees riders will get penalized at some point during the season, perhaps more than once, with the penance rapidly becoming draconian. If there’s one thing this sport doesn’t need it is to have a world championship decided based upon a technical post-race penalty.
  • The silly season is now down to determining who will take Marquez’ empty seat with Repsol Honda. Assuming either Oliveira or FDG draws the short straw, there could be a subsequent minor hassle with the RNF Aprilia squad. It doesn’t sound like HRC is inclined to boot Zarco up from LCR, for whatever reason other than ageism.

In Moto3 my boy Jaume Masia maintained his series lead in Indonesia, while Pedro Acosta, the next great Spanish rider, won again, confirming his coronation to replace Pol Espargaro on the GasGas team in the premier class is well-considered. Espargaro’s crash in Portugal during the season opener looked bad. It may turn out to have been career-ending, which is a shame. Let us not forget that this is an insanely dangerous sport.

Next stop: Australia. G’day.

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8 Responses to “MotoGP 2023 Round 15 – Mandalika”

  1. Anonymous Says:

    Man, Marini took a beating on his first weekend back. Having multiple pieces of titanium in me, I cringed watching him get knocked down by Binder like that. It seems two long lap penalties isn’t severe enough.

    Liked by 1 person

  2. Anonymous Says:

    Mad4TheCrest here:

    Great rundown as usual, Bruce, but I do have one quibble – Martin’s fall while leading may be atypical for him this season, but he’s done this kind of thing in the past. I believe it was the reason he didn’t get the factory ride over The Beast. He will come back strong at PI though, and will make Bagnaia work hard to keep that slim series points lead.

    One other thing that stood out for me: Fabio did a good job this weekend. He showed what he and his overshadowed M1 can do on a flowing track that supports their corner speed. That may bode well for a decent finish again at PI.

    Liked by 1 person

  3. Buzz Says:

    Another race in brutal heat. At least they shortened this one so the riders wouldn’t die.

    Like

  4. Anonymous Says:

    I thought the tire pressure regulations were put in place for reasons of safety. Left to their own risk assessment, the riders will air the tires down too far. The sport is dangerous enough. I support the enforcement of minimum tire pressures. And it’s the same for everyone, so why complain?

    Like

  5. Anonymous Says:

    During the sprint race, the commentators wondered whether Ducati would instruct Beastie to give way to BaggyEyes. I would’ve laughed at the old “Mapping 8” message, but I’m glad it didn’t happen.

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  6. Anonymous Says:

    Ha ha, the VR46 team with barely two functional collarbones between them.
    And Bruce’s readers with barely a dummy’s IQ in aggregate.
    Oh well, I like BaggyEyes, but I think I’m rooting for Martin. To have a satellite rider become Champion would be so cool.

    Either way, MMarquez is going to get a championship winning bike next year. He’ll also inherit mountains of set-up data, and a crew chief who knows how to interpret it. He’d better do well – or I’m really going to tease StarMag about it. 😀

    Liked by 1 person

  7. Anonymous Says:

    No doubt, Brucey is pouring over his old French book from college, trying to put together a report on Zarco’s win.

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  8. Anonymous Says:

    Guess you’ll do a double next week, eh Brucey?
    Hope you’re well.

    -YouKnowWho

    Liked by 1 person

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