Aprilia’s Maverick Vinales claimed the first sprint victory of his career at the Portuguese Grand Prix, taking the chequered flag ahead of Marc Marquez and Jorge Martin at the Algarve International Circuit on Saturday.
Championship leader and Francesco Bagnaia looked well set for a comfortable victory when he was in the lead but the Italian went wide with four laps left, allowing the three Spaniards behind him to move ahead. Marquez had started eighth on the grid but rode his Gresini Racing bike with purpose to claim his first podium on a Ducati machine, overtaking Martin on the final lap with a well-timed lunge to take second place in an all-Spanish podium.
“Honestly, I’m happy to be back on the top. We need to concentrate for (the race) tomorrow, but we will enjoy today. My first win for Aprilia,” said Vinales, who has now won in MotoGP on three different bikes – Aprilia, Suzuki and Yamaha.
“Coming here, I don’t know if I was going to ride,” said Vinales “And now my first victory with Aprilia. Today it feels good,” he said. “It’s been a long time. It feels amazing. I never doubted that I would be back. We are showing we are finding the way. Today, I had a lot of fun fighting with the others.”
Red Bull KTM’s Jack Miller had qualified fifth fastest but he shot off the line when the lights went out to take the lead on the opening lap. However, he was quickly reeled in by the chasing pack, with Bagnaia moving into lead with 10 laps to go. Behind them, Marquez was fired up as well after starting eighth on the grid following a crash in qualifying and the six-times champion set the fastest lap, quickly cutting his way through the pack before slotting in behind Bagnaia.
But Vinales, who had overcome a bout of illness on Friday, had qualified second-fastest and the Aprilia rider moved up and sandwiched himself in between the two Ducati machines, pushing Marquez down to third. Marquez lost one more position when sprint king Martin slipped through with seven laps left as the Pramac Racing rider set his sights on Vinales.
But all their eyes lit up when Bagnaia went wide allowing Vinales, Martin and Marquez to move into the top three. Vinales had free air in front of him and raced into the lead without anyone to challenge him while Marquez waited for the perfect opportunity to pounce on the final lap as he overtook Martin and finished second. The six-time world champion recorded his best finish since he was second in the main race in Australia in October 2022. “To be back overtaking and having the speed is surely a good feeling,” said Marquez.
“I didn’t expect that podium. Tomorrow, the race will be even more difficult. I made a mistake in qualifying that I was able to avoid. I engaged the rear device too early and I crashed,” Marquez added. “The team did a great job to repair the bike and in the race I was super lucky in the first lap to have a good start. This weekend we have the speed. When you have the speed you have more confidence you are able to overtake better.”
Bagnaia finished fourth, which allowed him to hold on to a slim lead in the championship, two points ahead of last year’s title challenger and runner-up Martin. “I messed up!” said Bagnaia. “I had a really good feeling on the bike, I got off to a good start, I opened up a gap and I was managing it well, so everything was going well.” explained the Italian. “I missed a braking point and I lost everything.”
Sprint Results 1. Maverick Vinales (ESP/Aprilia) 19min 49.636sec, 2. Marc Marquez (ESP/Ducati-Gresini) at 1.039, 3. Jorge Martin (ESP/Ducati-Pramac) 1.122, 4. Francesco Bagnaia (ITA/Ducati) 4.155, 5. Jack Miller (AUS/KTM) 4.329, 6. Enea Bastianini (ITA/Ducati) 4.384, 7. Pedro Acosta (ESP/GasGaS-Tech3) 5.088, 8. Aleix Espargaro (ESP/Aprilia) 6.161, 9. Fabio Quartararo (FRA/Yamaha) 7.501, 10. Raul Fernandez (ESP/Aprilia-Trackhouse) 8.484, 11. Marco Bezzecchi (ITA/Ducati-VR46) 9.529, 12. Miguel Oliveira (POR/Aprilia-Trackhouse) 10.519, 13. Alex Marquez (ESP/Ducati-Gresini) 11.458, 14. Joan Mir (ESP/Honda) 14.035, 15. Augusto Fernandez (ESP/GasGaS-Tech3) 14.853, 16. Franco Morbidelli (ITA/Ducati-Pramac) (16.049), 17. Takaaki Nakagami (JPN/Honda-LCR) 16.398 18. Luca Marini (ITA/Honda) 24.907
DNF: Brad Binder (RSA/KTM), Johann Zarco (FRA/Honda-LCR), Alex Rins (ESP/Yamaha), Fabio Di Giannantonio (ITA/Ducati-VR46)
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