Skip to main content

Sign up for free

  • Get quick access to your favorite articles

  • Manage alerts on breaking news and favorite drivers

  • Make your voice heard with article commenting.

Autosport Plus

Discover premium content
Subscribe

Recommended for you

WRC Canary Islands: Ogier heads Toyota 1-2-3-4-5 after dominant Friday

WRC
Rally Islas Canarias
WRC Canary Islands: Ogier heads Toyota 1-2-3-4-5 after dominant Friday

Why Marquez can only "survive" in Spanish GP despite return to full fitness

MotoGP
Spanish GP
Why Marquez can only "survive" in Spanish GP despite return to full fitness

What Apple TV’s F1® coverage delivers for fans in the U.S.

Sponsored
Miami GP
What Apple TV’s F1® coverage delivers for fans in the U.S.

What other tracks should return to the F1 calendar? Our writers have their say

Formula 1
What other tracks should return to the F1 calendar? Our writers have their say

What's behind McLaren's fresh A-B F1 team angst?

Feature
Formula 1
What's behind McLaren's fresh A-B F1 team angst?

The new challenge a BTCC legend is taking on in 2026

Feature
British GT
The new challenge a BTCC legend is taking on in 2026

WRC Canary Islands: Ogier extends lead as Toyota dominates

WRC
Rally Islas Canarias
WRC Canary Islands: Ogier extends lead as Toyota dominates

McNish appointed Audi F1 racing director with immediate effect

Formula 1
Saudi Arabian GP
McNish appointed Audi F1 racing director with immediate effect

Ducati close to MotoGP leaders on Jerez race pace - Jorge Lorenzo

Ducati rider Jorge Lorenzo believes he is only one or two tenths slower than the MotoGP leaders on race pace at Jerez

Lorenzo is yet to finish above ninth since joining Ducati for the 2017 season but was more competitive in Spanish Grand Prix practice.

In the practice four session immediately prior to qualifying, he was fourth quickest and within 0.265 seconds of pacesetter Marc Marquez's Honda.

Though he only qualified eighth, Lorenzo felt this was his strongest day with Ducati yet.

"Worse [grid] position than Austin, but much better feelings and closer to the top guys," he said.

"Maybe not for one lap, because I didn't make the gains for some reasons, but in terms of pace we are one or two tenths slower than the fastest, which is good."

Lorenzo, a three-time winner at Jerez in MotoGP, had been second to eventual poleman Dani Pedrosa in Saturday morning practice but could not replicate that single-lap pace in qualifying.

"When we put the soft tyres on the rear we didn't have the same feeling [as in practice three], especially on the exit," said Lorenzo.

"I spun too much, didn't have the same traction that I had in the morning.

"Even if I pushed at the maximum, I couldn't go lower than this 1m38.9s, that was just one tenth slower than the morning, but the other ones improved more."

Prior to the weekend, Lorenzo had hoped that his personal form at Jerez would compensate for Ducati's struggles at the track.

"I wanted to come in with a free mind and stay confident, do my work, ride better than ever and that's what I did," he said.

"Maybe here we don't have any point of the track that we can recover some distance that they take on us in the corners, because we don't have a long straight.

"But it's one of my favourite tracks. I'm riding well, having a lot of corner speed."

Lorenzo's factory Ducati team-mate Andrea Dovizioso was among those exiting in Q1 after what he described as a "very strange" qualifying performance that left him 14th.

"In FP4 we improved a little bit the bike and my pace was quite good, with a lot of temperature I was able to make 1m40.0s in the second run, with the used tyre, so I was quite happy about that," Dovizioso said.

"But I couldn't make a perfect lap to be in Q2. I'm very disappointed about that.

"To start [14th] is limiting - the track is very slow and tight so you can lose a lot of seconds in the first few laps and it's very difficult to overtake.

"But this is the situation and we have to try to gain the maximum positions at the beginning because I think we have good speed."

Previous article Jerez MotoGP: Pedrosa wins tough all-Honda pole fight with Marquez
Next article Yamaha MotoGP rider Vinales puzzled by left-hand corner struggles

Top Comments

Latest news