With Johann Zarco finishing second and Alex Marquez third, the podium was a satellite Ducati lockout.
The 2023 Argentina MotoGP race saw Marco Bezecchi take his maiden victory following a second place finish in Saturday’s sprint race. 2022 World champion and fellow VR46 riding academy stablemate, Francesco Bagnaia, crashed in the closing stages of the race while running second and has now dropped to second in the championship standings.
- Resurgent Morbidelli finishes fourth for Yamaha
- Zarco second after late charge
- Aprilia duo fade away during wet race despite early promise
Satellite Ducatis lock out podium, Bagnaia crashes
The podium-finishing trio of Bezecchi, Alex Marquez and Zarco were all on satellite Ducati machinery, with only Pramac’s Zarco on the latest GP23-spec bike. This cements Ducati’s position as one of the strongest and most consistent constructors on the grid. Zarco impressed in particular, with him leading a late charge from eighth, and overcoming a near 4-second deficit to Alex Marquez and Morbidelli in the last few laps, to climb up the order and take the chequered flag in second place.
While its bikes were dominating the track, factory Ducati rider Francesco Bagnaia lost the front end during the closing laps of the race while lapping in second place and thus conceded his championship lead to Bezecchi. He eventually rejoined and finished in 16th place. There were no points to be had for the factory Ducati Lenovo team, with Enea Bastianini not competing due to an injury sustained the previous weekend.
Factory Yamaha resurgence, Aprilias fade in wet race
With Franco Morbidelli qualifying as well as finishing both the main and sprint races in fourth place, it marked a return to form for the Italian, who had been struggling to finish in the top 10 for much of last season. 2021 World Champion Fabio Quartararo was involved in an incident with LCR Honda’s Takaaki Nakagami, which saw the Frenchman run wide and lose precious positions in the opening few corners of the race. Despite rejoining at the back of the 17 rider strong pack, Quartararo managed to cross the finish line in seventh place.
Factory Aprilia duo Maverick Vinales and Aleix Espargaro, who on Friday (during dry conditions) were two of the fastest riders on the grid, were unable to translate that into a podium finish during a wet race. With Miguel Oliveira out due to an injury sustained the previous weekend, RNF Aprilia’s sole rider on the grid, Raul Fernandez, finished 14th, just ahead of Aleix Espargaro. Aleix, who last year on this very circuit took Aprilia’s first ever win in the modern MotoGP era, finished 15th, taking just one point.
Topsy-turvy weekend for KTM
On Saturday, factory KTM rider Brad Binder took victory in the sprint race despite starting from 15th on the grid. But an opening lap incident during the main race saw him crash out and eventually rejoin to cross the line in 17th place. Fellow KTM teammate Jack Miller, despite starting on the last row of the grid in 16th place, managed to bring home his RC16 in sixth place. The sole rookie in the MotoGP class this year, Augusto Fernandez, battled with Quartararo and the factory Aprilia duo for much of the race before finally finishing 11th.
2023 MotoGP championship standings
With Bezechhi’s dominant victory on Sunday and a second place finish in the sprint race on Saturday, he now leads the World Championship ahead of Bagnaia and Zarco. Morbidelli’s strong performance throughout the weekend sees him take ninth place in the standings, just ahead of teammate Quartararo.
Up next in the calendar is the Grand Prix of the Americas, with MotoGP heading to COTA (Circuit of the Americas) on April 14-16.
2023 Argentina MotoGP results
2023 Argentina MotoGP results | ||
---|---|---|
Position | Rider | Team |
1 | Marco Bezecchi | VR46 Ducati |
2 | Johann Zarco | Pramac Ducati |
3 | Alex Marquez | Gresini Ducati |
4 | Franco Morbidelli | Monster Energy Yamaha |
5 | Jorge Martin | Pramac Ducati |
6 | Jack Miller | Red Bull KTM |
7 | Fabio Quartararo | Monster Energy Yamaha |
8 | Luca Marini | VR46 Ducati |
9 | Alex Rins | LCR Honda |
10 | Fabio Di Giannantonio | Gresini Ducati |
11 | Augusto Fernandez | GASGAS Tech3 |
12 | Maverick Vinales | Aprilia Racing |
13 | Takaaki Nakagami | LCR Honda |
14 | Raul Fernandez | RNF Aprilia |
15 | Aleix Espargaro | Aprilia Racing |
16 | Francesco Baganaia | Ducati Lenovo |
17 | Brad Binder | Red Bull KTM |
Also see:
Portuguese MotoGP: Unstoppable Bagnaia wins main and sprint races
Where to watch MotoGP in India