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MotoGP Valencia GP: Marquez dominates sprint ahead of Acosta

Alex Marquez untouchable as Marco Bezzecchi struggles in the half-distance race in Valencia

Alex Marquez, Gresini Racing

Alex Marquez, Gresini Racing

Photo by: Gold and Goose / Motorsport Images

Gresini rider Alex Marquez claimed a commanding victory in the final sprint of the 2025 MotoGP season at the Valencia Grand Prix, as polesitter Marco Bezzecchi struggled to fifth.

Marquez seized the lead from Bezzecchi at the start and held off an early charge from KTM rival Pedro Acosta to score his second consecutive sprint win, and the third of the campaign.

Acosta couldn’t keep up with Marquez in the second half of the race, but bagged yet another podium finish in second, with Fabio di Giannantonio finishing third.

At lights out, Bezzecchi got a poor launch from pole position, allowing Marquez to grab the lead into Turn 1 and Acosta to snatch second from him at the following corner.

The Aprilia rider continued to tumble down the order on the soft front tyre, settling into sixth behind the Yamaha of Fabio Quartararo at the end of the opening lap.

This allowed Marquez and Acosta to run away at the front, but there was no repeat of their epic duel from Portimao, with the former pulling out a lead of over a second by lap 6 of 12.

Pedro Acosta, Red Bull KTM Factory Racing

Pedro Acosta, Red Bull KTM Factory Racing

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

The 29-year-old eventually cruised to the chequered flag by 1.1s, as his world champion brother Marc Marquez watched on from the pits after returning to the paddock for the first time since his Indonesia crash. Acosta took the chequered flag in second place, leapfrogging his Ducati counterpart Francesco Bagnaia to fourth place in the riders’ standings.

Meanwhile, VR46’s di Giannantonio grabbed the final spot on the podium in third, passing Raul Fernandez at Turn 6 with just three laps to run after a race-long battle with the Trackhouse rider. Fernandez also came under pressure from a recovering Bezzecchi in the final lap of the race, but held on to finish as the top Aprilia in fourth.

Franco Morbidelli ended up sixth for VR46, while Quartararo slipped to seventh after losing places to both Bezzecchi and Morbidelli late on. A rapid opening lap allowed Brad Binder to finish eighth, having started 15th, while the championship point went to Trackhouse rookie Ai Ogura.

Honda failed to score a single point in the sprint after Joan Mir lost the front of his factory RC213V on lap two and took his team-mate Luca Marini along with him. The Japanese marque’s best finisher was LCR rider Johann Zarco in 10th.

Jorge Martin ran as high as 11th in the early stages on his comeback, but dropped to 22nd and last after he ran wide on lap 4 while trying to avoid Zarco.

Fermin Aldeguer and Jack Miller came together on lap three, an incident for which the Pramac rider was told to drop three positions. But after failing to serve the penalty in the required period, he was issued a long-lap penalty, which left him 12th - one spot behind Aldeguer.

Two-time MotoGP champion Francesco Bagnaia had a tough race en route to 14th, two places ahead of team-mate and Marc Marquez’s stand-in, Nicolo Bulega.

MotoGP Valencia GP sprint results

SPRINT

All Stats
 
Cla Rider # Bike Laps Time Interval km/h Retirement Points
1 Spain A. Marquez Gresini Racing 73 Ducati 13

19'37.490

  159.1   12
2 Spain P. Acosta Red Bull KTM Factory Racing 37 KTM 13

+1.149

19'38.639

1.149 159.0   9
3 Italy F. Di Giannantonio Team VR46 49 Ducati 13

+2.637

19'40.127

1.488 158.8   7
4 Spain R. Fernández Trackhouse Racing Team 25 Aprilia 13

+3.519

19'41.009

0.882 158.7   6
5 Italy M. Bezzecchi Aprilia Racing Team 72 Aprilia 13

+3.727

19'41.217

0.208 158.6   5
6 Italy F. Morbidelli Team VR46 21 Ducati 13

+6.349

19'43.839

2.622 158.3   4
7 France F. Quartararo Yamaha Factory Racing 20 Yamaha 13

+7.102

19'44.592

0.753 158.2   3
8 South Africa B. Binder Red Bull KTM Factory Racing 33 KTM 13

+7.352

19'44.842

0.250 158.1   2
9 Japan A. Ogura Trackhouse Racing Team 79 Aprilia 13

+7.685

19'45.175

0.333 158.1   1
10 France J. Zarco Team LCR 5 Honda 13

+9.346

19'46.836

1.661 157.9    
11 Spain F. Aldeguer Gresini Racing 54 Ducati 13

+10.067

19'47.557

0.721 157.8    
12 Australia J. Miller Pramac Racing 43 Yamaha 13

+11.148

19'48.638

1.081 157.6    
13 Italy E. Bastianini Tech 3 23 KTM 13

+11.911

19'49.401

0.763 157.5    
14 Italy F. Bagnaia Ducati Team 63 Ducati 13

+11.957

19'49.447

0.046 157.5    
15 Spain A. Rins Yamaha Factory Racing 42 Yamaha 13

+14.264

19'51.754

2.307 157.2    
16 Italy N. Bulega Ducati Team 11 Ducati 13

+14.951

19'52.441

0.687 157.1    
17 Portugal M. Oliveira Pramac Racing 88 Yamaha 13

+15.597

19'53.087

0.646 157.1    
18 Spain M. Viñales Tech 3 12 KTM 13

+16.699

19'54.189

1.102 156.9    
19 Spain A. Espargaro Honda HRC Test Team 41 Honda 13

+16.885

19'54.375

0.186 156.9    
20 Spain A. Fernandez Yamaha Factory Racing 7 Yamaha 13

+18.846

19'56.336

1.961 156.6    
21 Thailand S. Chantra Team LCR 35 Honda 13

+23.028

20'00.518

4.182 156.1    
22 Spain J. Martin Aprilia Racing Team 1 Aprilia 13

+23.655

20'01.145

0.627 156.0    
dnf Italy L. Marini Honda HRC 10 Honda 1

+12 Laps

1'38.301

12 Laps 146.6 Accident  
dnf Spain J. Mir Honda HRC 36 Honda 1

+12 Laps

1'38.403

0.102 146.5 Accident  
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