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Title-winning Valencia MotoGP race was a "nightmare" – Mir

Suzuki's Joan Mir said he struggled more than at any other MotoGP race in 2020 during a "nightmare" Valencia Grand Prix, despite securing a maiden premier class crown

Mir finished the penultimate round of the campaign in a safe seventh position having started from 12th, which was enough to secure him the MotoGP title and Suzuki's first since 2000.

Despite securing his maiden MotoGP victory in the European GP at the Ricardo Tormo Circuit last week, Mir admits he "suffered a lot" in Sunday's race and can't explain why.

"This race was a nightmare," Mir admitted.

"This race I struggled more than [any other race] all the season. It's a strange one to understand the situation because I don't know.

"I don't care about the race, we got the title. But it's true that I suffered a lot.

"I had a lot of big moments during the race with front and I was not able to ride comfortably that I normally use to ride. But we will work for it for the future."

Mir's title success makes him the sixth rider in premier class history to win the championship on a Suzuki, doing so on the marque's 100th anniversary and the 60th of its racing history.

Suzuki only returned to MotoGP full-time in 2015, following a hiatus from 2011-2014, and Mir said he didn't expect to be able to challenge for the title in only his second MotoGP campaign.

But for this reason, he feels winning the title means something more than it would with another manufacturer.

When asked what it meant to end Suzuki's long wait, he said: "For me this was the reason to sign with Suzuki.

"For me to of course win a title with every [any] manufacturer is unbelievable, it's the target.

"But I was quite brave in that moment to go with Suzuki because I didn't expect this potential on the bike in second year.

"But was like this. To get a title with Suzuki means something more than normal."

Mir joins Barry Sheene, Marco Lucchinelli, Franco Uncini, Kevin Schwantz and Kenny Roberts Jr as the only Suzuki premier class world champions.

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