Morbidelli seals first MotoGP victory at San Marino Grand Prix

Franco Morbidelli, who started second on the grid, finished in 42 minutes, 2.272 seconds to secure his first MotoGP win at the San Marino Grand Prix.

Published : Sep 13, 2020 19:56 IST

Franco Morbidelli started fast to lead at the first corner from Valentino Rossi, who was chasing his 200th podium finish, and maintained his advantage throughout the race.
Franco Morbidelli started fast to lead at the first corner from Valentino Rossi, who was chasing his 200th podium finish, and maintained his advantage throughout the race.
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Franco Morbidelli started fast to lead at the first corner from Valentino Rossi, who was chasing his 200th podium finish, and maintained his advantage throughout the race.

Petronas Yamaha's Franco Morbidelli produced a dominant display to win the San Marino Grand Prix on Sunday after team mate Fabio Quartararo was forced to retire from the race at Misano.

Italian Morbidelli, who started second on the grid, finished in 42 minutes, 2.272 seconds to comfortably beat Pramac Racing's Francesco Bagnaia and secure his first MotoGP win.

 

Spain's Juan Mir edged out seven-time MotoGP champion Valentino Rossi to take the final podium place, much to the disappointment of fans who returned to the grandstands with social distancing rules amid the COVID-19 pandemic.

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The 25-year-old Morbidelli started fast to lead at the first corner from Rossi, who was chasing his 200th podium finish, and maintained his advantage throughout the race.

“I'm happy, enjoying the moment. The only thing I can say is thanks to my team and all the people who've been working with me, helping me,” Morbidelli said.

“During the last laps I was thinking about seven years ago when I was here racing the Italian championship super stock... I was winning that race... it's the same (feeling) but much more. I'm overwhelmed at the moment,” he added.

 

Frenchman Quartararo, bidding for his third win of the season, crashed after losing control of his bike at turn four and he had to play catch up after dropping to 20th.

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He hit the tarmac again after a visit to the pits on lap 20 before retiring from the race.

Pole-sitter Maverick Vinales of Yamaha, who set an all-time lap record at the circuit on Saturday, could only finish sixth.

The first six rounds of the season have produced five different winners, with Quartararo winning the first two races in Jerez.

Ducati's Andrea Dovizioso, who finished seventh, leapfrogged Quartararo to lead the world championship with 76 points ahead of next weekend's Emilia Romagna Grand Prix at Misano.

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