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In a stunningly dramatic and tense Final Showdown at Valencia, Marc Marquez  took his sixth world title and fourth MotoGP World Championship despite a huge front end moment into Turn 1 and a run off track, coming home third in the race to defend his crown.

Title rival Andrea Dovizioso similarly suffered a run off from P4, but the Italian was unable to save it and sadly crashed out of contention in the race and Championship.

At the front, the race was a duel to the line between Repsol Honda Team’s Dani Pedrosa and Monster Yamaha Tech 3’s Johann Zarco – with the race decided in favour of the Spaniard on final lap as Pedrosa pounced and defended to perfection for his second victory of the year.

Marquez got the holeshot from pole, with teammate Pedrosa slicing through from the second row to take over in second – and Zarco pushed down to third. Dovizioso made a good start to move up to sixth, then past Andrea Iannone and glued to the back of the second Ducati of Jorge Lorenzo.

Early on, Zarco took over in the lead – with Marquez seeing him coming and slotting into second. Pedrosa remained in third, with the two Ducati machines glued together around a second behind and the tense tick of the clock counting down.

After a Zarco error, a Marquez pass and then the Frenchman hitting back, laps ticked down before Marquez struck for the lead – and ran wide. Sliding on his knee for a stunning save into Turn 1, the reigning Champion headed for the gravel – but managed to rejoin, yet behind Dovizioso.

Lorenzo then bolted to chase down Pedrosa and Zarco ahead, before the Ducati Team rider went down suddenly – and just as suddenly, the dream was over for his teammate. A run off into the gravel that couldn’t be saved saw Dovizioso’s title hopes disappear after a nevertheless stunning season to take the runner up spot.

Dani Pedrosa vs Johann Zarco was then the duel for the win, with Pedrosa initially attacking at the final corner but the Frenchman able to hit back.

As the last lap dawned, the Spaniard tucked in and then pounced into Turn 1, managing to hold off Zarco around the tight Circuit Ricardo Tormo Circuit to take his second victory of the season.

Marquez, back into the podium places after the falls ahead, kept his calm to the end to take third and the title, making him the youngest ever six-time World Champion and the youngest to take four premier class Championships.

Alex Rins put in an impressive rookie ride into fourth, ahead of Valentino Rossi after a more difficult race for the ‘Doctor’. Iannone dropped back slightly after a run off at Turn 1 to take sixth, ahead of a great final race with EG 0,0 Marc VDS for Jack Miller in P7.

Cal Crutchlow moved up after crashing out in Q1 and qualifying outside the top ten to cross the line in P8, with Michele Pirro putting in another solid wildcard appearance to come home in ninth. Tito Rabat also impressed, locking out the top ten.

Bradley Smith rounded out the Austrian factory’s first season in the premier class in P11, and it was a tough weekend and final race of 2017 for third-placed in the Championship Maverick Viñales, as the Spaniard came home in P12. Danilo Petrucci, Karel Abraham and Hector Barbera (Reale Avintia Racing) completed the points in the Final Showdown, with the dust settling around the dramatic final race as the flag flew.

That’s a wrap on a stunning season to savour, with 2017 having provided some of the most incredible racing ever seen. Marquez retains the crown, and Dovizioso fought to the end – and on Tuesday, the clock resets once again.

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Honda's arc Marquez began Sunday by topping Warm Up at Valencia, fastest from Alex Rins and teammate Andrea Iannone. Andrea Dovizioso was fourth as final preparations come to an end and the finale approaches.

One incident saw Jorge Lorenzo suffer an issue on track and return to pit lane via scooter.

Warm-Up Result

Pos Rider Team Km/h Time Gap 1st/Prev
1 Marc MARQUEZ Repsol Honda Team 316.2 1'31.263  
2 Alex RINS Team SUZUKI ECSTAR 319.6 1'31.448 0.185 / 0.185
3 Andrea IANNONE Team SUZUKI ECSTAR 313.4 1'31.548 0.285 / 0.100
4 Andrea DOVIZIOSO Ducati Team 320.3 1'31.599 0.336 / 0.051
5 Dani PEDROSA Repsol Honda Team 317.6 1'31.613 0.350 / 0.014
6 Johann ZARCO Monster Yamaha Tech 3 310.3 1'31.697 0.434 / 0.084
7 Mika KALLIO Red Bull KTM Factory Racing 316.6 1'31.827 0.564 / 0.130
8 Valentino ROSSI Movistar Yamaha MotoGP 311.7 1'31.884 0.621 / 0.057
9 Tito RABAT EG 0,0 Marc VDS 313.3 1'31.894 0.631 / 0.010
10 Cal CRUTCHLOW LCR Honda 315.6 1'31.984 0.721 / 0.090
11 Aleix ESPARGARO Aprilia Racing Team Gresini 315.9 1'32.019 0.756 / 0.035
12 Jorge LORENZO Ducati Team 316 1'32.026 0.763 / 0.007
13 Jack MILLER EG 0,0 Marc VDS 317.1 1'32.043 0.780 / 0.017
14 Pol ESPARGARO Red Bull KTM Factory Racing 316.8 1'32.079 0.816 / 0.036
15 Bradley SMITH Red Bull KTM Factory Racing 312.7 1'32.195 0.932 / 0.116
16 Michele PIRRO Ducati Team 318.8 1'32.217 0.954 / 0.022
17 Scott REDDING OCTO Pramac Racing 314.4 1'32.263 1.000 / 0.046
18 Alvaro BAUTISTA Pull&Bear Aspar Team 318.8 1'32.267 1.004 / 0.004
19 Maverick VIÑALES Movistar Yamaha MotoGP 313.1 1'32.383 1.120 / 0.116
20 Danilo PETRUCCI OCTO Pramac Racing 317.6 1'32.456 1.193 / 0.073
21 Karel ABRAHAM Pull&Bear Aspar Team 318.1 1'32.562 1.299 / 0.106
22 Loris BAZ Reale Avintia Racing 314.1 1'32.568 1.305 / 0.006
23 Sam LOWES Aprilia Racing Team Gresini 309.6 1'32.630 1.367 / 0.062
24 Hector BARBERA Reale Avintia Racing 320 1'32.728 1.465 / 0.098
25 Michael VAN DER MARK Monster Yamaha Tech 3 306.8 1'33.522 2.259 / 0.794

 

source: motogp.com

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The provisional 2018 MotoGP calendar has been released and updated, giving fans a first glimpse at where – and when – each of the races next season will take place.

The show begins under the floodlights in Qatar on 18th March, and Valencia brings down the curtain with the finale once more - but this time a little later, on 18th November.

And with the exciting addition of Buriram in Thailand, set to be the first of the flyaways, it’s now 19 races on an action-packed 2018 calendar.

2018 MotoGP Calendar

Round

Event Circuit Race day
1 QATAR GP Losail International Circuit 18th MARCH
2 ARGENTINA GP Termas de Rio Hondo 08th APRIL
3 AMERICAS GP Circuit of the Americas 22nd APRIL
4 SPANISH GP Circuito de Jerez 06th MAY
5 FRENCH GP Le Mans 20th MAY
6 ITALIAN GP Autodromo di Mugello 03rd JUNE
7 CATALUNYA GP Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya 17th JUNE
8 DUTCH GP TT Circuit Assen 01st JULY
9 GERMAN GP Sachsenring 15th JULY
10 CZECH GP Automotodrom Brno 05th AUGUST
11 AUSTRIAN GP Red Bull Ring - Spielberg 12th AUGUST
12 BRITISH GP Silverstone Circuit 26th AUGUST
13 SAN MARINO GP Misano World Circuit Marco Simoncelli 09th SEPTEMBER
14 ARAGON GP MotorLand Aragon 23rd SEPTEMBER
15 THAI GP Chang International Circuit 07th OCTOBER
16 JAPANESE GP Twin Ring Motegi 21st OCTOBER
17 AUSTRALIAN GP Phillip Island Circuit 28th OCTOBER
18 MALAYSIAN GP Sepang International Circuit 04th NOVEMBER
19 VALENCIA GP Circuit Ricardo Tormo 18th NOVEMBER

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Rookie of the Year and top Independent Team rider Johann Zarco starts the Valencia GP from second, and thinks he could find the pace to fight for the win on Sunday.

It would be a maiden victory following two podiums for the two-time intermediate class Champion – but he’s aware he has some serious company.

“I’m not going into the race thinking I have nothing to lose, but thinking we’ve done good work since Friday and we’ve improved,” says the Frenchman.

“It means what we’ve been doing in Japan, Australia and Malaysia is still paying off. I’ve tried to learn from that, I’m so happy to start from second tomorrow, it’s so important."

"And all weekend Iannone has been strong, Jorge will be there – and these are the two guys who want to win and want to fight. Lorenzo also starts strong, they are fighters on the track and I’ll be part of it." He added

The key, says Zarco, will be to get a good start – with Marc Marquez’ focus likely elsewhere.

“Losing positions at the start would be more difficult,” he affirms. “I think Marquez will maybe control the race for the title, but me, if I have the pace…I’m still missing some tenths but if I can find it for tomorrow, why not think about the victory.”

 

         

 

 

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