Subscribe

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

Czech MotoGP: Nakagami leads Mir in tight FP1 at Brno

Takaaki Nakagami led a tight MotoGP Czech Grand Prix FP1 by 0.011s seconds from Joan Mir, while Maverick Vinales crashed early in the session

Vinales lost the front of his factory Yamaha early on the way into the penultimate left-hander at Turn 13 five minutes into the session, a cold tyre catching him out.

The Yamaha rider wheeled his M1 back into pitlane and would rejoin the session soon after, but appeared to be in some discomfort with his arm - though Yamaha confirmed he was suffering from no obvious injuries.

Petronas SRT's Franco Morbidelli had set the pace with a 1m58.629s on his M1, though was usurped by KTM's Pol Espargaro with a 1m57.607s.

The factory KTM rider improved to a 1m57.392s with 36 minutes left on the clock, which would go unchallenged until the closing stages when a handful of riders fitted fresh rubber.

When he returned to action, Vinales leaped up to second with a 1m57.565s, but would slip back to fifth at the chequered flag.

Espargaro's time was finally beaten with just under five minutes to go by Suzuki's Joan Mir with a 1m57.364s on a fresh hard rear tyre.

Nakagami, who said back at Jerez that he has been trying to copy Marc Marquez's braking style, deposed Mir with a 1m57.353s to lead a session in which the top 15 were covered by under half a second.

Espargaro completed the top three behind Nakagami and Mir, with Avintia's Johann Zarco jumping up to fourth late on with a 1m57.460s.

Andrea Dovizioso trailed Vinales in sixth on the factory Ducati ahead of his team-mate Danilo Petrucci, with Valentino Rossi eighth on the Yamaha.

Morbidelli wound up ninth having led the very early stages, with LCR's Cal Crutchlow - still recovering from a broken wrist last month - completed the top 10.

Alex Rins was 12th on his Suzuki as he continues to recover from the broken and dislocated shoulder he suffered at the Spanish GP weekend, with championship leader Fabio Quartararo 13th on the Petronas SRT M1 having not gone for a late time attack.

Completing the top 15 was Pramac's Francesco Bagnaia, who had a fast crash at Turn 1 late on. He has been taken to hospital for further checks.

Brad Binder trailed the Ducati rider in 16th after the KTM rider had a late effort which initially put him second-fastest cancelled.

Needing a second operation on his broken right arm after breaking the titanium plate in a "domestic accident" on Monday, HRC test rider Stefan Bradl is filling in for Marc Marquez.

Making his first appearance since last year's Austrian GP weekend, the 2011 Moto2 world champion was 22nd and last in FP1.

Czech Republic MotoGP - FP1 results

Pos Rider Team Gap
1 Takaaki Nakagami LCR Honda 1m57.353s
2 Joan Mir Suzuki 0.011s
3 Pol Espargaro KTM 0.039s
4 Johann Zarco Avintia Ducati 0.107s
5 Maverick Vinales Yamaha 0.212s
6 Andrea Dovizioso Ducati 0.279s
7 Danilo Petrucci Ducati 0.285s
8 Valentino Rossi Yamaha 0.293s
9 Franco Morbidelli Petronas Yamaha 0.365s
10 Cal Crutchlow LCR Honda 0.400s
11 Aleix Espargaro Aprilia 0.436s
12 Alex Rins Suzuki 0.470s
13 Fabio Quartararo Petronas Yamaha 0.478s
14 Jack Miller Pramac Ducati 0.483s
15 Francesco Bagnaia Pramac Ducati 0.486s
16 Brad Binder KTM 0.660s
17 Miguel Oliveira Tech3 KTM 0.808s
18 Alex Marquez Honda 1.226s
19 Tito Rabat Avintia Ducati 1.375s
20 Bradley Smith Aprilia 1.464s
21 Iker Lecuona Tech3 KTM 1.783s
22 Stefan Bradl Honda 1.840s


Be part of the Autosport community

Join the conversation
Previous article Quartararo reveals how worst moment of career started change to reach MotoGP
Next article Francesco Bagnaia ruled out of Czech GP with knee fracture after FP1 crash

Top Comments

There are no comments at the moment. Would you like to write one?

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