Motorcycle Racing

Bagnaia “angry” after Marquez Portugal MotoGP clash, accepts racing incident verdict

Marc Marquez, Gresini Racing, Francesco Bagnaia, Ducati Team

The reigning double world champion and the eight-time title winner collided on lap 23 of 25 in Sunday’s grand prix at the Algarve International Circuit while battling over fifth place.

Marquez threw his Gresini Ducati up the inside of Bagnaia at the Turn 5 left-hander, but ran slightly wide.

As he tried to cut back to the racing line, Bagnaia moved to try to retake the position on the inside and the pair connected. Both crashed and failed to score, but the stewards elected to take no further action following an investigation.

Bagnaia accepts this verdict, but admitted to his frustration at tallying up a non-score in the second round of the season just as he did last year when he slid out of second in the Argentina GP.

“I was confident before the start because yesterday and this morning my feeling was good,” Bagnaia explained.

“I was feeling better with the grip and everything was better and better. So, I was thinking about a race of attacking and trying to have a good control of the tyres.

“But as soon as I started I was more in trouble, I expected to be faster and the guys at the front were too fast for me.

“So, I just tried to avoid everything, I was just trying to manage the tyres but [it] was difficult.

Marc Marquez, Gresini Racing, Francesco Bagnaia, Ducati Team

Photo by: Gold and Goose / Motorsport Images

“I tried to be as in front as possible, but when Pedro [Acosta] arrived, he was too fast. And when Marc arrived, he just tried to overtake, he went wide.

“I tried to close the line. He crossed his line and we collided. It’s something that makes me angry, but it’s normal.

“It’s a racing incident and we have to move on to the next one.”

Bagnaia, who is now 23 points adrift of Portugal GP winner Jorge Martin, added: “It makes me angry because I finished with zero points.

“Last year in the second race I did the same [in Argentina], finished with zero points from my mistake.

“This year for a racing incident. We know perfectly with 38 races still, the championship is very long.

“But I was expecting and I wanted to be more constant with results and not starting having zero points already like last year in the second race.”

Bagnaia denied that his retaliation effort during the battle was “risky”, as he felt Marquez left the door open by running wide.

“When a rider in front of you who you are battling goes wide, what do you want to do?” the Italian ventured.

Francesco Bagnaia, Ducati Team

Francesco…

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