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Alex Marquez dominates at Jerez a year on from his maiden win, but it was a bittersweet day for Ducati

Alex Marquez, Gresini Racing

Alex Marquez claimed Ducati’s first MotoGP victory of 2026 at the Spanish Grand Prix, but the Italian marque’s factory team suffered a double retirement.

Having struggled to fight at the front in the opening flyaway races, the younger Marquez bounced back in style at Jerez, claiming a dominant win from fifth on the grid.

The result followed exactly a year after his maiden MotoGP victory at the same venue, and almost six months after he scored Ducati’s last victory at the Malaysian Grand Prix.

Aprilia’s Marco Bezzecchi had to settle for second after winning the last five grands prix in a row, while Fabio di Giannantonio completed the podium positions for VR46.

At the start of the race, Marc Marquez made a clean start from pole position to grab the holeshot into Turn 1. But he immediately found himself under pressure from Bezzecchi and Alex Marquez, who both made rapid getaways from the second row to slot directly behind him.

Alex Marquez appeared the quickest of the trio and wasted no time to pass Bezzecchi, before piling in pressure on his elder brother.

Closing the gap at the start of lap 2, the Gresini rider made the decisive move into Turn 6, sending his bike up the inside to storm into the lead.

Marc Marquez, Ducati Team

Marc Marquez, Ducati Team

Photo by: Gold and Goose Photography / LAT Images / via Getty Images

With Alex Marquez having been the fastest rider all weekend in dry conditions, a counter attack was always unlikely, but Marc Marquez threw it all away at Turn 11, losing the front of his factory Ducati.

With the reigning world champion out, Bezzecchi emerged as Alex Marquez’s closest challenger, with Jorge Martin following the pair in third after making a rocketing start from 10th on the grid.

But di Giannantonio soon joined the battle, snatching third from Martin on lap 4 before reeling in Bezzecchi. The Aprilia rider managed to respond to di Giannantonio’s pace to maintain the status quo, but their battle allowed Marquez to run away at the front.

By half-distance, the Spaniard was circulating two seconds in front - and he went on to take the chequered flag by the same margin to claim his fourth career win in the premier class.

While Bezzecchi’s winning run came to an end due to Marquez’s dominant performance, a second-place finish allowed him to consolidate his lead at the top of the standings.

Meanwhile, di Giannantonio finished a strong third to claim his second Sunday podium in four races, with Martin banking a solid haul of points in fourth.

Trackhouse duo Ai Ogura and Raul Fernandez came from lower regions of the top 12 to climb to fifth and sixth respectively, both passing the LCR Honda of Johann Zarco late in the race. Seventh-place, however, still marked Honda’s best finish of the year.

Alex Marquez, Gresini Racing

Alex Marquez, Gresini Racing

Photo by: Gold and Goose Photography / LAT Images / via Getty Images

Tech3’s Enea Bastianini emerged as the highest-placed KTM rider at Jerez after outduelling the factory’s star rider Pedro Acosta, who eventually slipped to 10th behind Gresini’s Fermin Aldeguer.

Francesco Bagnaia was running ahead of Acosta in ninth when he suddenly slowed down on lap 13 with what appeared to be a loss of power. The two-time MotoGP champion brought the bike back to the pits, marking a double retirement for the factory Ducati Team following Marquez’s crash earlier in the race.

Bagnaia’s retirement elevated Brad Binder (KTM) and Franco Morbidelli (VR46) to 11th and 12th, while Luca Marini recovered to 13th on the factory Honda after a poor opening lap left him down in 18th.

Marini’s team-mate Joan Mir also mounted a strong comeback after serving two long lap penalties for an FP2 infringement, finishing right behind the top Yamaha of Fabio Quartararo in 15th.

Aprilia’s wildcard Lorenzo Savadori joined Bagnaia and Marc Marquez in the list of retirees.

MotoGP Spanish GP - Race results

All Stats
 
Cla Rider # Bike Laps Time Interval km/h Retirement Points
1 Spain A. Marquez Gresini Racing 73 Ducati 25

40'48.861

      25
2 Italy M. Bezzecchi Aprilia Racing Team 72 Aprilia 25

+1.903

40'50.764

1.903     20
3 Italy F. Di Giannantonio Team VR46 49 Ducati 25

+5.796

40'54.657

3.893     16
4 Spain J. Martin Aprilia Racing Team 89 Aprilia 25

+9.229

40'58.090

3.433     13
5 Japan A. Ogura Trackhouse Racing Team 79 Aprilia 25

+9.891

40'58.752

0.662     11
6 Spain R. Fernández Trackhouse Racing Team 25 Aprilia 25

+10.614

40'59.475

0.723     10
7 France J. Zarco Team LCR 5 Honda 25

+13.039

41'01.900

2.425     9
8 Italy E. Bastianini Tech 3 23 KTM 25

+14.411

41'03.272

1.372     8
9 Spain F. Aldeguer Gresini Racing 54 Ducati 25

+19.778

41'08.639

5.367     7
10 Spain P. Acosta Red Bull KTM Factory Racing 37 KTM 25

+22.431

41'11.292

2.653     6
11 South Africa B. Binder Red Bull KTM Factory Racing 33 KTM 25

+22.799

41'11.660

0.368     5
12 Italy F. Morbidelli Team VR46 21 Ducati 25

+24.867

41'13.728

2.068     4
13 Italy L. Marini Honda HRC 10 Honda 25

+26.871

41'15.732

2.004     3
14 France F. Quartararo Yamaha Factory Racing 20 Yamaha 25

+29.532

41'18.393

2.661     2
15 Spain J. Mir Honda HRC 36 Honda 25

+29.899

41'18.760

0.367     1
16 Spain A. Rins Yamaha Factory Racing 42 Yamaha 25

+32.921

41'21.782

3.022      
17 Brazil D. Moreira Team LCR 11 Honda 25

+36.656

41'25.517

3.735      
18 Australia J. Miller Pramac Racing 43 Yamaha 25

+37.577

41'26.438

0.921      
19 Turkey T. Razgatlioglu Pramac Racing 7 Yamaha 25

+44.557

41'33.418

6.980      
20 Spain A. Fernandez Yamaha Factory Racing 47 Yamaha 25

+1'05.023

41'53.884

20.466      
dnf Italy F. Bagnaia Ducati Team 63 Ducati 12

+13 Laps

21'42.739

13 Laps   Retirement  
dnf Italy L. Savadori Aprilia Racing Team 32 Aprilia 6

+19 Laps

11'44.081

6 Laps   Retirement  
dnf Spain M. Marquez Ducati Team 93 Ducati 1

+24 Laps

2'50.851

5 Laps   Accident  
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