Jorge Martin grabbed pole position for a second straight week at the Red Bull Ring as he smashed a nine-minute old lap record in the dying seconds of Austrian Grand Prix qualifying. On the fastest track in MotoGP, championship leader Fabio Quartararo seemed to have sealed pole when he smashed the record set in practice on Friday by fellow Frenchman Johann Zarco.
Quartararo’s time of 1min 22.677sec was three-tenths of a second faster that anyone else nine minutes later when Martin set off on one last attempt with qualifying time about to expire. He took advantage of Ducati-Pramac team-mate Zarco’s slipstream to grab pole.
“When I’m in the first sector up by three tenths, I was impressed, I was thinking ‘Oh! I can make the pole’,” said the Spanish rookie. “But I make a mistake in the last corner and I had some doubts.”
“This pole position is unbelievable,” said Martin who won on only his sixth MotoGP start last weekend. “I’m living a dream. I love the bike. We’re living a great moment.”
Martin rode straight off to practice his starts, lining up alongside Quartararo. The two exchanged playful but vigorous slaps. Quartararo, who finished third last Sunday to stretch his championship lead, had mixed emotions after locking up a front-row start on a track where Yamaha’s slightly lower top speed leaves it at a disadvantage.
“The pole position would be even better,” he said. “I did the best I could. I’m happy to be on the front row. Jorge is super fast. It’s a shame. A little bit disappointed but a good place to start the race.”
Martin crashed twice in free practice, once on Friday and again yesterday morning and had to go through pre-qualifying to earn one of the last two places in the top-ten shootout for pole. “I always work well under pressure and today was one of those days,” he said.  “After crashing in FP3 I wasn’t confident.”
He said he still had pain in his knee from the morning’s crash. Ducati’s strength on the track brought it four of the first six positions on the grid.  Factory rider Francesco Bagnaia was third 0.43sec slower than Martin.  Zarco, the second Pramac rider, was fourth and Australian Jack Miller, on a factory bike was sixth. Sandwiched between them on the second row will be Spaniard Marc Marquez on a Honda. Yamaha, on the other hand, only have Quartararo on the grid after suspending Maverick Vinales for the way he treated his bike last Sunday in the closing stages at the Styria Grand Prix on same track. “At the end everything was about frustration, also a lot of nerves,” Vinales told the official MotoGP website yesterday. “I ride the bike in a different way in the last laps. It was a big explosion of emotion and frustration.” Former seven-time champion Valentino Rossi will start today’s race from 18th.

 

Vinales apologises to Yamaha, blaming ‘explosion of emotion’

Spaniard Maverick Vinales apologised yesterday after being suspended from this weekend’s Austrian Grand Prix by Yamaha on suspicion of attempting to damage his bike at last week’s Styrian GP.
Vinales stalled when last Sunday’s race restarted after a crash and had dropped to last when he pulled into the pits on the final lap.
Yamaha said on Thursday they had suspended him for the way he treated the bike late in the race. The Spaniard had reported a litany of technical problems during the race.
“At the end everything was about frustration, also a lot of nerves,” Vinales told the official MotoGP website. “I ride the bike in a different way in the last laps. It was a big explosion of emotion and frustration.”
“I want to apologise to Yamaha,” he said at the Red Bull Ring in Spielberg, site of the last week’s and this week’s races.
“I feel very sad,” said the 26-year-old. “I have a warrior soul. I want to be there on the track fighting.”
“I am still a Yamaha rider and I respect their decision,” he added. Vinales and Yamaha had announced in late June that they would be ending their contract a year early, at the end of 2021.

 

Starting grid
MotoGP
Front row
1. Jorge Martin (ESP/Ducati-Pramac) 1:22.643
2. Fabio Quartararo (FRA/Yamaha) 1:22.677
3. Francesco Bagnaia (ITA/Ducati) 1:23.063
2nd row
4. Johann Zarco (FRA/Ducati-Pramac) 1:23.120
5. Marc Marquez (ESP/Honda) 1:23.227
6. Jack Miller (AUS/Ducati) 1:23.320
3rd row
7. Joan Mir (ESP/Suzuki) 1:23.378
8. Aleix Espargaro (ESP/Aprilia) 1:23.423
9. Miguel Oliveira (POR/KTM) 1:23.499
4th row
10. Brad Binder (RSA/KTM) 1:23.568
11. Pol Espargaro (ESP/Honda) 1:23.738
12. Takaaki Nakagami (JPN/Honda-LCR) 1:23.990
Selected
6th row
18. Valentino Rossi (ITA/Yamaha-SRT) 1:23.939