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DS Penske on the pace and in the points!

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Sanya ePrix
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MotoGP Czech GP: Ogura scorches to first pole position

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Misano MotoGP: Jorge Lorenzo wins as Dani Pedrosa suffers devastating exit

Jorge Lorenzo moved into a commanding MotoGP championship lead by winning a San Marino Grand Prix in which Dani Pedrosa's ambitions were dealt a devastating blow

After a start procedure which at times verged on farce, the Honda rider was forced to start from the back of the grid, rather than the pole slot he had secured in qualifying.

By the first turn he was already 12th, but by the sixth he was out, sent flying as Pramac's Hector Barbera made contact with his rear.

Lorenzo, starting from second, was therefore able to cruise to victory almost totally unopposed, moving into a 38 point championship lead with just five races to go.

After the shock of Pedrosa's exit, there was some cheer at least for the home fans as Valentino Rossi captured his first dry podium for Ducati on his final home-soil race for the outfit.

The Italian recalled celebrations of old as he sprinted across the gravel trap to rejoice in front of his home fans.

Rossi had initially been shadowed by LCR Honda's Stefan Bradl, but the German faded to sixth late on.

Rossi too had feared he could do the same, but Ducati's new updates helped him maintain his pace as Bradl slipped back, and he eventually sealed second.

The fight for the final podium spot boiled down to a great dice between Gresini's Alvaro Bautista and Tech 3 Yamaha's Andrea Dovizioso.

Bautista edged it in a photo finish across the line, earning his first podium of the year.

Such highs were matched however by the low of Pedrosa's devastating early exit, which followed an unfortunate sequence of early events.

The first start was abandoned just as the lights were due to go out, leading to general confusion and a small delay.

Pedrosa then had an issue restarting for the second warm up lap, and was not able to join before the safety car had departed, forcing him to start from the back - which then led to his exit as he attempted to fight his way back up the order.

Also crashing out was front-row qualifier Cal Crutchlow, who dropped back at the start and then fell on lap five while running fifth.

Results - 27 laps:

Pos  Rider             Team/Bike                Time/Gap
 1.  Jorge Lorenzo     Yamaha                 42m49.836s
 2.  Valentino Rossi   Ducati                   + 4.398s
 3.  Alvaro Bautista   Gresini Honda            + 6.055s
 4.  Andrea Dovizioso  Tech 3 Yamaha            + 6.058s
 5.  Ben Spies         Yamaha                   + 7.543s
 6.  Stefan Bradl      LCR Honda               + 13.272s
 7.  Nicky Hayden      Ducati                  + 40.907s
 8.  Jonathan Rea      Honda                   + 43.162s
 9.  Randy de Puniet   Aspar Aprilia         + 1m09.627s
10.  Michele Pirro     Gresini FTR-Honda     + 1m13.605s
11.  Colin Edwards     Forward Suter-BMW     + 1m16.695s
12.  Yonny Hernandez   Avintia FTR-Kawasaki  + 1m19.073s
13.  James Ellison     Paul Bird Aprilia     + 1m19.408s
14.  Danilo Petrucci   Ioda Suter-BMW            + 1 lap
15.  David Salom       Avintia FTR-Kawasaki      + 1 lap

Retirements:

     Aleix Espargaro   Aspar Aprilia             23 laps
     Cal Crutchlow     Tech 3 Yamaha              4 laps
     Mattia Pasini     Speed Master Aprilia        1 lap
     Hector Barbera    Pramac Ducati              0 laps
     Dani Pedrosa      Honda                      0 laps
     Karel Abraham     Cardion Ducati             0 laps
Previous article Misano MotoGP: Valentino Rossi says race will be true test of Ducati progress
Next article Misano MotoGP: Hector Barbera apologises for Dani Pedrosa crash

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