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

Pedrosa takes dominant home victory

Dani Pedrosa took a dominating victory in his home race in the Spanish MotoGP at Jerez

The Repsol Honda rider, who started from second on the grid, took the lead right at the start and immediately opened a gap over the rest of the field.

When the gap got up to three seconds, Pedrosa was curiously shown a pit-board on lap 12 saying his advantage was only 1.1 seconds. While the gap rose to up to four and a half seconds two thirds of the way through the race, Pedrosa ultimately won by 2.8 seconds over Fiat Yamaha's Valentino Rossi.

The Italian ran throughout the race in a pack with rookie teammate Jorge Lorenzo and the other works Honda of Nicky Hayden.

The three ultimately ended the race in that order, even though Rossi nearly gave second place away to Lorenzo when he started celebrating on the main straight one lap too early.

Andrea Dovizioso had reached fifth place in the last laps with his JiR Team Scot Honda but threw it all away on the last corner of the last lap when he went wide and was overtaken by Loris Capirossi's Rizla Suzuki, James Toseland's Tech 3 Yamaha, and John Hopkins's Kawasaki.

Honda Gresini's Shinya Nakano finished in ninth place ahead of the Suzuki of Chris Vermeulen.

It was a day to forget for reigning champion Casey Stoner. The Ducati Marlboro rider got up to third by the end of the first lap after starting in seventh place, but dropped to last place after going through the gravel on lap three.

The Australian recovered many positions but had another off while fighting for tenth place with Nakano and Vermeulen with four laps to go, and had to be content with 11th place, ahead of teammate Marco Melandri.

Colin Edwards, who qualified third with his Tech 3 Yamaha, went in the gravel from sixth place on lap five, rejoined the track, but retired in the pits one lap later.

Pos  Rider             Bike           Time
 1.  Daniel Pedrosa    Honda     (M)  45:35.121
 2.  Valentino Rossi   Yamaha    (B)  +   2.883
 3.  Jorge Lorenzo     Yamaha    (M)  +   4.339
 4.  Nicky Hayden      Honda     (M)  +  10.142
 5.  Loris Capirossi   Suzuki    (B)  +  27.524
 6.  James Toseland    Yamaha    (M)  +  27.808
 7.  John Hopkins      Kawasaki  (B)  +  28.296
 8.  Andrea Dovizioso  Honda     (M)  +  28.449
 9.  Shinya Nakano     Honda     (B)  +  32.569
10.  Chris Vermeulen   Suzuki    (B)  +  35.091
11.  Casey Stoner      Ducati    (B)  +  42.223
12.  Marco Melandri    Ducati    (B)  +  44.498
13.  Anthony West      Kawasaki  (B)  +  45.807
14.  Alex de Angelis   Honda     (B)  +  45.871
15.  Toni Elias        Ducati    (B)  +1:09.558
16.  Sylvain Guintoli  Ducati    (B)  +1:14.442

Retirements:

     Rider             Bike           Laps
     Colin Edwards     Yamaha    (M)  6
     Randy de Puniet   Honda     (M)  0

Be part of the Autosport community

Join the conversation
Previous article Lorenzo also tops warm-up at Jerez
Next article Pedrosa praises team's progress after win

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