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Francesco Bagnaia wins Valencia GP, 2nd straight MotoGP title

Francesco Bagnaia wins Valencia GP, 2nd straight MotoGP title

VALENCIA, Spain — Ducati’s Francesco Bagnaia won the season-ending Valencia Grand Prix on Sunday to claim a second straight MotoGP world championship after closest contender Jorge Martin crashed out following a collision with Marc Marquez.

Pramac Racing’s Martin, who was 14 points behind Bagnaia going into the final race, made the title race tighter by winning Saturday’s sprint but was ultimately unable to thwart the Italian.

Bagnaia, who began the race on pole after Maverick Vinales was handed a three-place penalty, had an excellent start but was matched in the first two laps by Martin, who moved up from sixth to second by Turn 2 of the race.

However, Martin was reckless in his eagerness to overtake Bagnaia, and a coming-together between the two on Turn 1 of the third lap resulted in the Spaniard being forced wide and dropping down to seventh.

Martin threw caution to the wind at the Circuit Ricardo Tormo and tried to surge back up the leaderboard, but he clipped Marquez’s rear and was left in the gravel on Lap 6.

The crash ensured a dismal end to six-time MotoGP champion Marquez’s tenure at Honda, with his final race for the Japanese manufacturer ending in a non-finish. Marquez will join Gresini Racing in 2024.

KTM’s Jack Miller led the race for a significant period after overtaking Bagnaia on Lap 15, with the Italian rider content to concede the lead, but the Australian crashed hard on Lap 20 to throw away his shot at the checkered flag.

With clear track in front of him, Bagnaia crossed the finish line first to seal the title in emphatic fashion, though he had to hold off Gresini Racing’s Fabio Di Giannantonio and Pramac Racing’s Johann Zarco, who finished second and third, respectively.

“Amazing, I don’t have many words now. It was a long race, 27 laps of struggle because I didn’t feel good in the front,” Bagnaia said. “I let the KTM riders past, and then the feeling became better, maybe because the pressure or the temperature changed.

“From that moment I was able to push, but in the last few laps I was completely without tires, but we did it. It was quite tough, but we did it. We won the title, we won the race, it’s impossible to get any better than this.”

Marco Bezzecchi of VR46 Racing, Ducati’s Enea Bastianini and GasGas Factory Racing Tech3’s Augusto Fernandez were also unable to…

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