MotoGP remains one of the most exhilarating forms of motorsport to watch, and much of that comes down to the extraordinary speeds involved and the ever-present element of danger. This past weekend served as a stark reminder of just how unforgiving the sport can be.
The Barcelona race was red-flagged twice following separate multi-rider incidents, highlighting the risks riders contend with every weekend. When the race finally concluded, Fabio Di Giannantonio emerged victorious. Joan Mir crossed the line in second but was later handed a tyre-pressure penalty, promoting Fermin Aldeguer to second and Francesco Bagnaia to third.
- Race red-flagged twice after crashes involving Alex Marquez, Pedro Acosta and Johann Zarco
- Mir penalised post-race, Bagnaia promoted to podium
- Bezzecchi maintains championship lead heading to Mugello
Acosta leads opening laps
Pedro Acosta made a perfect launch from pole position to lead into Turn 1. Behind him, the opening laps saw intense battles throughout the field, with Raul Fernandez, Johann Zarco, Alex Marquez, and Jorge Martin trading positions repeatedly in the fight for the podium places.
By Lap 5, Fernandez had moved into the lead with Acosta close behind. Acosta reclaimed the position a few laps later, while Alex Marquez overtook Fernandez for second on Lap 10. At that point, the younger Marquez brother – fresh off victory in Saturday’s sprint race – looked like the most comfortable rider at the front and appeared poised to challenge Acosta for the lead.
First red flag after Acosta-Marquez collision
On Lap 12, disaster struck when Acosta suffered a technical issue on the main straight, suddenly losing speed. Alex Marquez, following closely behind, had nowhere to go and slammed into the rear of the stricken KTM.
The impact destroyed the Gresini Ducati and scattered debris across the circuit, also collecting Di Giannantonio in the process. The race was immediately red-flagged as Marquez was taken off track for medical attention. Fortunately, he later confirmed on social media that he had escaped with only a couple of fractures requiring surgery – a remarkably fortunate outcome considering the severity of the crash.
Di Giannantonio, Fernandez, and Zarco were all cleared to participate in the restart.
Second restart descends into more chaos
The race resumed for a 13-lap sprint, with grid positions based on the order from the last completed lap. Acosta once again led into Turn 1, but more drama unfolded almost immediately as Bagnaia, Zarco, and Luca Marini all crashed at the opening corner, forcing race control to red-flag the event for a second time.
Zarco came off worst in the incident after becoming tangled with Bagnaia’s bike. He was transported to hospital with a left leg injury later confirmed to involve ACL and PCL damage – an injury expected to require surgery and a lengthy recovery period.
Di Giannantonio takes control in final restart
The final restart was shortened to 12 laps, with Acosta once again holding the lead into Turn 1. Early drama continued as contact between Martin and Fernandez sent both Aprilia riders into the gravel.
Acosta initially led from Mir and Bagnaia, while Di Giannantonio climbed into third by Lap 4. The Italian then overtook Mir with five laps remaining before passing Acosta for the lead three laps later. Once in front, Di Giannantonio quickly pulled away to secure a commanding victory.
Further back, the fight for the remaining podium spots went down to the final lap. Mir overtook Acosta for second, with Aldeguer following through shortly after. At the final corner, Ai Ogura made contact with Acosta while attempting a late move for the podium, sending the KTM rider crashing out.
Post-race penalties reshuffle the podium
Di Giannantonio initially crossed the line ahead of Mir and Aldeguer, securing his first MotoGP victory in VR46 colours. However, post-race penalties altered the final classification.
Mir received a tyre-pressure infringement penalty that dropped him out of the podium positions, promoting Bagnaia to third. Ogura was also handed a three-second penalty for his last-corner collision with Acosta, demoting him from fifth to eighth in the final standings.