Ducati rider Fabio Di Giannantonio triumphed in a crash-hit Catalunya MotoGP, during which Alex Marquez was taken to hospital injured after being flipped off his bike.
The race was red-flagged twice, the first time after Pedro Acosta’s bike cut out and Marquez made contact with him, with his Ducati-Gresini destroyed in a horrific crash. On the first corner after the restart, French rider Johann Zarco crashed and the race was red-flagged again, and restarted with 12 laps remaining.
Marquez’s team Gresini later confirmed he had suffered fractures to a cervical vertebra and his right clavicle. “He will undergo surgery today by the team at Hospital General de Catalunya,” said Gresini in a statement on social media.
Acosta started on pole and was out in front until Di Giannantonio snatched the lead with two laps remaining. Joan Mir and Fermin Aldeguer also edged ahead of Acosta, who then came to grief shortly before the end after being wiped out by Ai Ogura, who was hit with a time penalty and dropped to ninth.
Mir, who came in second, was later demoted to 13th with a 16-second penalty for low tyre pressure – one of five riders to be penalised long after the race finished. As a result, Fermin Aldeguer moved from third to second, and Francesco Bagnaia climbed onto the podium. Overall leader Marco Bezzecchi struggled but was able to extend his advantage after his closest contender Jorge Martin suffered his fifth crash of the weekend.
Raul Fernandez took out Martin after trying an aggressive move down the inside while they were challenging for the lead, leaving Bezzecchi, who finished fourth after the results were adjusted for penalties, 15 points ahead.
Di Giannantonio hurt his hand in the first terrifying crash when the Italian was hit by a wheel from Marquez’s ruined bike, but the VR46 man recovered to claim his first MotoGP win in three years.
“I’m so happy. But first of all I was really worried about all the riders who crashed,” said Di Giannantonio. “Today has not been an easy day for everybody. I really hope that Alex (Marquez) is fine. We’ve been really lucky.
We know that our sport is amazing. We try to give an amazing show, we are humans, we are in danger.”
Di Giannantonio’s victory moved him up to third overall on 116 points, followed by Acosta on 92. Marquez, who triumphed at last year’s Catalan Grand Prix and also won the sprint on Saturday, was pushing leader Acosta when the accident happened.
Acosta lost speed because of a technical issue and Marquez hit his bike, veering off the track into a terrible crash before being taken to hospital, conscious. Last weekend, Alex Marquez’s older brother Marc, the reigning champion, was injured after another violent crash at Le Mans.
The second major incident was a collision involving Zarco, Luca Marini and Bagnaia. Zarco was taken by ambulance to hospital for checks after he was caught up with Bagnaia’s bike. LCR MotoGP team boss Lucio Cecchinello said Zarco had pain in “the femur area”, his left leg and knee.
Results
1. Fabio Di Giannantonio (ITA) Ducati-VR46 20 minutes 06.243sec, 2. Joan Mir (ESP) Honda at 1.250sec, 3. Fermin Aldeguer (ESP) Ducati-Gresini 1.466, 4. Francesco Bagnaia (ITA) Ducati 4.320, 5. Marco Bezzecchi (ITA) Aprilia 4.679, 6. Fabio Quartararo (FRA) Yamaha 4.876, 7. Luca Marini (ITA) Honda 4.971, 8. Brad Binder (RSA) KTM 5.137, 9. Ai Ogura (JPN) Aprilia-Trackhouse 5.377, 10. Diogo Moreira (BRA) Honda 6.839, 11. Alex Rins (ESP) Yamaha 6.916, 12. Franco Morbidelli (ITA) Ducati-VR46 7.160, 13. Maverick Vinales (ESP) GASGAS-KTM 10.147, 14. Jack Miller (AUS) Yamaha-Pramac 10.452, 15. Toprak Razgatlioglu (TUR) Yamaha-Pramac 11.808, 16. Raul Fernandez (ESP) Aprilia-Trackhouse 15.066, 17. Augusto Fernandez (ESP) Yamaha 16.245
Not classified: Jorge Martin (ESP) Aprilia, Pedro Acota (ESP) KTM
Did not finish: Alex Marquez (ESP) Ducati-Gresini, Johann Zarco (FRA) Honda, Enea Bastianini (ITA) KTM
Overall drivers’ standings
1. Marco Bezzecchi (ITA) 140 pts, 2. Jorge Martin (ESP) 127, 3. Fabio Di Giannantonio (ITA) 116, 4. Pedro Acosta (ESP) 92, 5. Ai Ogura (JPN) 76, 6. Raul Fernandez (ESP) 68, 7. Alex Marquez (ESP) 67, 8. Francesco Bagnaia (ITA) 60, 9. Marc Marquez (ESP) 57, 10. Fermin Aldeguer (ESP) 43, 11. Luca Marini (ITA) 42, 12. Enea Bastianini (ITA) 39, 13. Fabio Quartararo (FRA) 36, 14. Brad Binder (RSA) 36, 15. Johann Zarco (FRA) 34, 16. Franco Morbidelli (ITA) 34, 17. Joan Mir (ESP) 28, 18. Diogo Moreira (BRA) 16, 19. Alex Rins (ESP) 12, 20. Toprak Razgatlioglu (TUR) 5, 21. Maverick Vinales (ESP) 3, 22. Jack Miller (AUS) 3