Honda rider Marc Marquez became MotoGP champion for the sixth time after defeating Fabio Quartararo in a scintillating battle for Thailand Grand Prix victory.
Marquez, who has sealed the 2019 crown with four races to spare, is now just two premier-class titles short of Giacomo Agostini and one short of Valentino Rossi. He is officially an eight-time world champion when his 2010 125cc and 2012 Moto2 title are considered.
The 26-year-old spent most of the Buriram race in Quartararo’s wheeltracks before inflicting another last-lap defeat on the rookie, whose wait for a maiden MotoGP victory goes on.
Quartararo, who had been allowed extra RPM from his engine this weekend and qualified on pole for the fourth time for Petronas Yamaha, had maintained the lead off the line, while Marquez jumped Maverick Vinales immediately for second and saw off a challenge from the works Yamaha rider on the run down to Turn 3.
Marquez himself then slipstreamed past Quartararo on that straight on the second tour, only to get his braking wrong into Turn 3, running wide in the sweeping right-hander and only just keeping second place from Vinales.
The Honda man was back on Quartararo’s rear tyre in no time, and soon the pair began to make a break for it – with only Vinales managing to keep up for a couple of laps before dropping to more than three seconds off the lead by the end of the 10th lap of the 26.
By then Quartararo had managed to put some distance between himself and Marquez, with the gap reaching nearly seven tenths of a second at one point, only for the championship leader to immediately start catching the rookie back up.
On lap 13, he was all over Quartararo once more, hounding him corner after corner as the race passed its halfway point.
He continued to put Quartararo under relentless pressure until lap 23, where he finally tried a move around the outside of Turn 3 but eventually conceded the corner to his rival.
Another look followed at the same corner the lap after, but this wasn’t enough to unsettle Quartararo heading into the penultimate lap – on which the Frenchman yet again hit his marks and kept Marquez at bay.
But on the final lap Marquez overtook Quartararo using the slipstream even before the braking into Turn 3, and managed to get his Honda stopped just in time to exit the corner ahead.
Quartararo stayed with Marquez over the rest of the lap and launched it down the inside of the Honda man at the final corner, desperately trying to get his bike stopped and pull off a block pass, but running out just wide to allow Marquez a crucial cut-back move.
The pair were separated by 0.171s at the chequered flag, with Vinales completing the podium another second down.
Dovizioso finished fourth, 11s down on Marquez as he fought off the charging Suzuki of Alex Rins.
Quartararo’s Petronas team-mate Franco Morbidelli made it three Yamahas in the top six, while Suzuki’s Joan Mir defeated Yamaha’s Valentino Rossi in a close scrap for eighth place.
Danilo Petrucci settled for ninth in the second works Ducati, and Takaaki Nakagami completed the top 10 on the year-old LCR Honda.
Pramac Ducati rider Jack Miller was forced to surrender his sixth place on the grid and pull into the pitlane at the start of the warm-up lap, but recovered to 14th after starting from the pits.
Marquez’s Honda team-mate Jorge Lorenzo was a bruising 18th as he was successful at fighting off Karel Abraham (Avintia Ducati) and Hafizh Syahrin (Tech3 KTM) but finished 54s down on the race winner.
KTM’s Johann Zarco replacement Mika Kallio was the only rider to crash out, hitting the deck at Turn 8 on the fourth lap while running 16th.
Aprilia’s Aleix Espargaro was the only other retirement, the Spaniard seeming disconsolate as he pulled into the pitlane with an unspecified issue.
Race result
Pos | Rider | Team | Bike | Laps | Gap |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Marc Marquez | Honda | Honda | 26 | 39m36.223s |
2 | Fabio Quartararo | Petronas Yamaha | Yamaha | 26 | 0.171s |
3 | Maverick Vinales | Yamaha | Yamaha | 26 | 1.380s |
4 | Andrea Dovizioso | Ducati | Ducati | 26 | 11.218s |
5 | Alex Rins | Suzuki | Suzuki | 26 | 11.449s |
6 | Franco Morbidelli | Petronas Yamaha | Yamaha | 26 | 14.466s |
7 | Joan Mir | Suzuki | Suzuki | 26 | 18.729s |
8 | Valentino Rossi | Yamaha | Yamaha | 26 | 19.162s |
9 | Danilo Petrucci | Ducati | Ducati | 26 | 23.425s |
10 | Takaaki Nakagami | LCR Honda | Honda | 26 | 29.423s |
11 | Francesco Bagnaia | Pramac Ducati | Ducati | 26 | 30.103s |
12 | Cal Crutchlow | LCR Honda | Honda | 26 | 33.216s |
13 | Pol Espargaro | KTM | KTM | 26 | 35.667s |
14 | Jack Miller | Pramac Ducati | Ducati | 26 | 39.736s |
15 | Andrea Iannone | Aprilia | Aprilia | 26 | 40.038s |
16 | Miguel Oliveira | Tech3 KTM | KTM | 26 | 40.136s |
17 | Tito Rabat | Avintia Ducati | Ducati | 26 | 44.589s |
18 | Jorge Lorenzo | Honda | Honda | 26 | 54.723s |
19 | Karel Abraham | Avintia Ducati | Ducati | 26 | 56.012s |
20 | Hafizh Syahrin | Tech3 KTM | KTM | 26 | 1m01.431s |
– | Aleix Espargaro | Aprilia | Aprilia | 17 | Retirement |
– | Mika Kallio | KTM | KTM | 3 | Retirement |
Riders’ standings
Pos | Rider | Points |
---|---|---|
1 | Marc Marquez | 325 |
2 | Andrea Dovizioso | 215 |
3 | Alex Rins | 167 |
4 | Maverick Vinales | 163 |
5 | Danilo Petrucci | 162 |
6 | Valentino Rossi | 145 |
7 | Fabio Quartararo | 143 |
8 | Jack Miller | 119 |
9 | Cal Crutchlow | 102 |
10 | Franco Morbidelli | 90 |
11 | Pol Espargaro | 80 |
12 | Takaaki Nakagami | 74 |
13 | Joan Mir | 58 |
14 | Aleix Espargaro | 46 |
15 | Francesco Bagnaia | 34 |
16 | Andrea Iannone | 33 |
17 | Miguel Oliveira | 29 |
18 | Johann Zarco | 27 |
19 | Jorge Lorenzo | 23 |
20 | Tito Rabat | 18 |
21 | Stefan Bradl | 16 |
22 | Michele Pirro | 9 |
23 | Sylvain Guintoli | 7 |
24 | Hafizh Syahrin | 7 |
25 | Karel Abraham | 5 |
26 | Bradley Smith | 0 |
27 | Mika Kallio | 0 |