Crutchlow on top at Jerez, Marquez crashes

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Independent Team rider Cal Crutchlow rules the roost in the Gran Premio Red Bull de Espana as actions ends on Friday, with the Argentina GP winner taking to the top in FP2 and leader on the combined timesheets.

What does that mean? On a Friday as close as this, it means he was 0.028 clear of Dani Pedrosa  in P2, 0.091 ahead of Johann Zarco and still not even a tenth in front of Andrea Iannone in fourth.

As well as the incredible equality of the top four within a tenth, the top 15 ended Day 1 within a second and the whole grid was covered by two seconds – a tantalising prospect for race day if it remains the same.

The headlines didn’t stop there. 2017 Jerez winner Pedrosa, who is still recovering from a broken wrist, put in a stunning performance once again to not only threaten the top but also show some key consistency – with Zarco just behind him and top Yamaha.

Iannone kept his solid form rolling after his rostrum finish in Texas, just ahead of what was another key moment of the day: reigning Champion Marc Marquez, despite having shown awesome pace throughout both sessions, crashing out on a fast push towards the end of FP2 – rider ok.

The man right behind Marquez after Day 1 was Championship leader Andrea Dovizioso, who went fastest in FP1, with his teammate Jorge Lorenzo taking seventh on Friday at the track at which he took his first podium in red in 2017.

Jack Miller was the top Independent Team Ducati rider in P8 overall after more solid top ten pace, with Valentino Rossi taking ninth overall after a late move up from outside provisional Q2 entry.

The man completing the top ten was Pol Espargaro, after the Spaniard put in an incredible charge in FP1 to end that session in third and the day in tenth overall.

Maverick Viñales was P12 and will have his sights set significantly further up the timesheets on Saturday, as will Alex Rins, who was P14 but missed the Spanish GP in 2017 due to injury, turning a wheel in anger at the venue for the first time this year.

Wildcard Mika Kallio, riding a first version of the 2019 machine for KTM, was P16 on Day 1.

 

         

 

 

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