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Lewis Duncan

French MotoGP: Ducati's Bagnaia claims back-to-back pole positions

The early stages of the Q2 qualifying session teed up a pole battle between Bagnaia and Quartararo, but the former would streak clear of the Yamaha rider to claim back-to-back poles in 2022.  

Ducati’s Bagnaia set the initial benchmark at 1m30.910s, leading Quartararo by 0.300 seconds, before the Italian improved that to a 1m30.699s.  

But Quartararo would produce a 1m30.688s with just under 10 minutes of the 15-minute shootout to go to lead Bagnaia by just 0.011s.  

Both riders would light up the timing screens across their second runs, but Bagnaia clicked into supreme form to regain top spot with two minutes remaining with a 1m30.450s.  

Teammate Jack Miller shadowed him to leap up to second, the Australian missing out by 0.069s.  

Quartararo was quick as he started his final lap, but bled time across the rest of the tour and could do nothing to better his earlier 1m30.688s.  

With Aprilia’s Aleix Espargaro moving up to third for a third-straight front row, Quartararo found himself relegated to the head of row two in fourth on his homecoming as world champion and the current standings leader.  

Gresini Ducati’s Enea Bastianini completed the top five having made several pushes for pole, with the other home favourite Johann Zarco sixth on his Pramac Ducati.  

The Frenchman may be dragged up to the stewards after Q2 after getting in Pol Espargaro’s way at the Dunlop chicane while the Honda rider was on a push lap late on.  

Joan Mir came through Q1 to out-qualify Suzuki teammate Alex Rins in seventh, with Q1 pacesetter Jorge Martin ninth on the Pramac Ducati.  

Marc Marquez made a mistake on his final lap into the Dunlop chicane and was unable to do any better than 10th, 0.698s off the pace, with Honda teammate Pol Espargaro and LCR’s Takaaki Nakagami trailing him.  

VR46 rookie Marco Bezzecchi rallied in the latter stages of Q1 after a scary off going through Turn 2, but would be denied a place in the pole shootout session by 0.007s.  

The Italian jumped ahead of Aprilia’s Maverick Vinales, who was some 0.331s adrift of Bezzecchi on his VR46 2021-spec Ducati.  

The sister VR46 bike of Luca Marini will start 15th ahead of Gresini rookie Fabio Di Giannantonio, with KTM’s miserable French GP continuing with a disappointing qualifying display for all of its riders.  

Miguel Oliveira was the leading RC16 in 17th ahead of teammate Brad Binder, while Tech 3 duo Remy Gardner and the injured Raul Fernandez were 22nd and last respectively.  

Yamaha’s Franco Morbidelli disappointed in 19th having felt like he’d made steps forward in understanding the factory M1 on Friday at Le Mans, with RNF Racing’s Andrea Dovizioso shadowing him in 20th.  

LCR’s Alex Marquez and RNF’s Darryn Binder will start 21st and 23rd.  

The 2022 MotoGP French GP is due to start at 2pm local time (1pm BST) on Sunday.  

MotoGP French Grand Prix - Q2 results:

Cla Rider Bike Time Gap
1 Italy Francesco Bagnaia Ducati 1'30.450  
2 Australia Jack Miller Ducati 1'30.519 0.069
3 Spain Aleix Espargaro Aprilia 1'30.609 0.159
4 France Fabio Quartararo Yamaha 1'30.688 0.238
5 Italy Enea Bastianini Ducati 1'30.711 0.261
6 France Johann Zarco Ducati 1'30.863 0.413
7 Spain Joan Mir Suzuki 1'30.943 0.493
8 Spain Alex Rins Suzuki 1'30.977 0.527
9 Spain Jorge Martin Ducati 1'31.068 0.618
10 Spain Marc Marquez Honda 1'31.148 0.698
11 Spain Pol Espargaro Honda 1'31.526 1.076
12 Japan Takaaki Nakagami Honda 1'31.595 1.145

MotoGP French Grand Prix - Q1 results:

Cla Rider Bike Time Gap
1 Spain Jorge Martin Ducati 1'30.804  
2 Spain Joan Mir Suzuki 1'30.933 0.129
3 Italy Marco Bezzecchi Ducati 1'30.940 0.136
4 Spain Maverick Viñales Aprilia 1'31.271 0.467
5 Italy Luca Marini Ducati 1'31.363 0.559
6 Italy Fabio Di Giannantonio Ducati 1'31.487 0.683
7 Portugal Miguel Oliveira KTM 1'31.547 0.743
8 South Africa Brad Binder KTM 1'31.610 0.806
9 Italy Franco Morbidelli Yamaha 1'31.617 0.813
10 Italy Andrea Dovizioso Yamaha 1'31.618 0.814
11 Spain Alex Marquez Honda 1'31.763 0.959
12 Australia Remy Gardner KTM 1'31.820 1.016
13 South Africa Darryn Binder Yamaha 1'32.596 1.792
14 Spain Raúl Fernández KTM 1'32.767 1.963

 

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