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By: Matt Beer

Summary

Status: Stopped
So that's a wrap for our MotoGP live coverage in 2019. Thank you for having followed along with us.

The season may be over, but intrigue remains in MotoGP this year, and many more questions should be answered within a few days. Questions like: Will Honda announce Alex Marquez as Marc's teammate? Will Ducati break Petrucci's contract for 2020 to promote the in-form Miller? And what margin will Vinales - the Marc Marquez of testing - top the post-season test in Valencia by?

We'll have all the answers for you on Autosport and Motorsport.com. Ciao.
Valencia MotoGP: Marquez wins to seal teams' title for Honda
Marquez: "I mean, was a difficult weekend, because we tried many things, but we work very very hard, all the team, and yeah, was one goal this weekend, that was try to win the race and try to achieve the teams' championship.

"And all the Repsol Honda team deserves this championship, from Japan to Cervera, everybody did a great job.

"Perfect season. Will be difficult to repeat, but now it's time to enjoy it - Tuesday starts 2020 season, but anyway amazing to finish in this way."
 
Quartararo: "Who imagined that at the end of the season we'd have six pole positions, seven podiums? Can't ask for more, really. That's the work of the team, myself, we work so hard.

"I take the opportunity because everybody tell us that I didn't deserve this seat in MotoGP, I wanted to prove that they are wrong. Unbelievable to finish the season in this way.

"Thanks to everybody who helped us make this season - was not an easy one, really looking forward to next year because we will be stronger."
Miller: "I think I made up for last week in Malaysia. I think it was my best race to date. Consistent, stayed there, was chasing Fabio. I started coming back towards him, felt I had a second wind for a bit there.

"But yeah, amazing race from those two - flawless, from all of us. A long but fun race, they go quickly when you're like that and you're constantly chasing, so it was awesome."
 
Jorge Lorenzo makes it around Circuit Ricardo Tormo on his cooldown lap, to rapturous applause from the public. It wasn't a race to remember for him - it wasn't a season to remember - but I think MotoGP misses him already.
 
Final riders' standings (top 10): 1 Marquez, 420; 2 Dovizioso, 269; 3 Vinales, 211; 4 Rins, 192; 5 Quartararo, 192; 6 Petrucci, 176; 7 Rossi, 174; 8 Miller, 165; 9 Crutchlow, 133; 10 Morbidelli, 115.
Still no replay of what exactly happened to Iannone, but live timing suggests it was a crash. Hopefully it wasn't a coming together with his sqaudmate or something, because Aprilia doesn't really need that extra headache.
Final results: 1 Marquez, 2 Quartararo, 3 Miller, 4 Dovizioso, 5 Rins, 6 Vinales, 7 Mir, 8 Rossi, 9 A Espargaro, 10 P Espargaro, 11 Rabat, 12 Kallio, 13 Lorenzo, 14 Abraham, 15 Syahrin.

That's exactly 100 points for Pol, who low-key has easily been one of the standout riders this season.
Jorge Lorenzo's MotoGP career thus concludes with 13th place.
Iannone has vanished on the final lap here while fighting against Aprilia teammate Aleix Espargaro for ninth.
Fabio Quartararo and Jack Miller complete the podium, ahead of Andrea Dovizioso and Alex Rins.
Marc Marquez comes across the finish line to wrap up victory number 12 of the season, and a teams' title for Repsol Honda with it.
Final lap starts now. For me personally the biggest intrigue is whether KTM's star man Pol Espargaro can clear the 100-point mark here - he would need to pass his brother on the final lap to do so.
Two laps to go. Two more MotoGP laps then for Jorge Lorenzo, who is set to conclude his MotoGP career with a 14th place - having contributed, however insignificantly, to a MotoGP teams' title.
Quartararo is managing to keep Miller at three-quarters of a second behind, so he should be able to hang on to second, barring any late dramas.
Marquez is of course on course for his 18th top-two finish of the season. What an absolutely monstrous season. Like it or not, the rest of MotoGP should feel embarrassed.
 
 
Five laps to go, Miller might yet have a go at securing second here, as he begins to close the gap to Quartararo up ahead.
Vinales is having one of those really puzzling races - he now has clear air ahead thanks to Morbidelli's crash, but he's not doing anything with it. He's three quarters of a second slower than Marquez this time around.
Zarco's back in his pit garage, and looks in reasonably good shape, thank goodness.
As it stands, Vinales will secure third place in the standings ahead of Rins, while Quartararo will overtake Petrucci for fifth.
Current order: 1 Marquez, 2 Quartararo, 3 Miller, 4 Dovizioso, 5 Rins, 6 Vinales, 7 Mir, 8 Rossi, 9 Iannone, 10 A Espargaro, 11 P Espargaro, 12 Kallio, 13 Rabat, 14 Lorenzo, 15 Abraham, 16 Syahrin.
Out front, Marquez is now 1.3s ahead of Quartararo, with Miller a further 1.3s down. We have just over seven laps left to run in 2019.
Morbidelli is down at Turn 4. Is it getting just a bit too cold and windy out there?
Some questions have to be asked about that, because it was three riders falling completely independent of each other in the same corner, seconds apart.
Replays confirm that Zarco was indeed collected by Lecuona's bike. He was on his feet already and raging as he walked away from the site of the crash, his back facing the track. Then Lecuona's KTM came in at speed and took him off his feet, and now he's headed to the medical centre for a check-up.
In the meantime, Marquez has jumped to an eight-tenths lead over Quartararo. The Frenchman is riding a valiant race, but it looks like a losing battle.
Best wishes obviously to Zarco, who might have to wait a fair while for his next MotoGP outing if some of the paddock rumours are to be believed.

It's also absolutely gutting for Lecuona, this, because he has been brilliant today.
Zarco is stretchered off from the site of the crash. Replays show that three riders went down at Turn 6 in quick succession, and while the TV feed hasn't yet shown that part of the incident, logic dictates Lecuona's bike might have hit Zarco.
And Petrucci's down, too. Now Ducati is really up against it.
Multi-bike crash. Zarco and Lecuona are in the gravel, and Zarco looks seriously winded.
Petrucci has overtaken Rossi for ninth. The teams' championship is still poised to go to Repsol Honda at the moment, but Ducati has a shot.
Vinales is only four seconds off the race leader in seventh, but he's haemorrhaging time behind Morbidelli. If he's to benefit from his usual strong late-race pace, now would be a good time to start getting a move on.
 
Quartararo has managed to stop the proverbial bleeding - he is keeping within six tenths of Marquez, and has put some space between himself and Miller again.
A lap or so after overtaking Valentino Rossi for ninth, Cal Crutchlow crashes out at the first corner.

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