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MotoGP back this weekend for epic challenge that is Portimao


MotoGP 2022 – Round Five – Portimao
Grande Prémio Tissot de Portugal


The European leg of the MotoGP season swings into action this weekend at Portimao, and there is plenty to talk about on the way in after another shake-up last time out. The 4.6 km (2.85 mile) circuit features nine right- and six left-hand corners and a front straight almost a kilometre long, that allows the riders to hit speeds of more than 350 km/h. The elevation changes in its rolling layout are quite dramatic and include blind corner entries, it really is one of the most interesting circuits on the calendar.

Enea Bastianini (Gresini Racing MotoGP) is the natural place to start this preview as the ‘Beast’ blasted back to the top step in style in Texas. In so doing, the Italian also took back the Championship lead and made quite a statement taking Ducati’s first win at the track, backing up a season opener in Qatar that was impressive but on Borgo Panigale happy hunting grounds. COTA was different, and Bastianini is, according to Ducati Lenovo Team’s Jack Miller with whom he shared the podium in Austin, also different – with rider not machine making the difference on, amongst other things, tyre life. That bodes well as the Bologna bullets face down Portimão.

Enea Bastianini

Portimão is a beautiful track, very technical and with lots of elevation changes… a very exciting track overall! We will get there in an excellent mood after the weekend at Austin, where we were able to be competitive from the get-go – and well, the race win was surely the icing on the cake. We only must stay focused and keep working as one, just as we’ve been doing all along, and have fun – which is the main thing. Regarding Jerez, it’s a track where I know we can be fast because we have tested there already, and gaps will be even smaller. It’s another track I like and where we can do well, so let’s see how it goes.”

The aforementioned Miller took his first podium of the season last time out though, and it wasn’t a win but it was a nevertheless impressive and hard-fought third place. He has been on the podium twice in Portugal too, and after it more being bad luck denting his place in the standings so far, he’ll want to stay in the podium postcode. Team-mate Francesco Bagnaia, meanwhile, also has two podiums at the track and one was a win – with the Italian having proven a masterful opponent last season. As he rebuilds some good form after a a fairly nightmare first two races, will familiar and successful turf see him take another step forward?

Pecco Bagnaia and Jack Miller together on the podium together at Portimao MotoGP last year
Pecco Bagnaia and Jack Miller together on the podium together at Portimao MotoGP last year

Jorge Martin (Pramac Racing) had a likewise difficult opening two races before then fighting for the win in Argentina, but COTA saw both he and teammate Johann Zarco fade slightly in the latter stages. Martin will want to put bad memories of the venue to bed as well as get back in the podium fight as he pushes to make up lost ground, and the number 89 can never be counted out – especially on Saturdays, where he’s on quite a run of front rows.

The man who beat Miller to that second place will also feel more confident heading into Portimão. Alex Rins (Team Suzuki Ecstar) pitched it to perfection to get Suzuki to 500 Grand Prix podiums and open his count for the season, on top of some solid consistency from the Hamamatsu factory overall this season. He’s had incredible speed on the Algarve before, before disaster struck, but the 2022 GSX-RR seems to have reset those limits Rins was all too often overstepping in 2021, allowing the Spaniard’s pace to shine again.

2020 Champion Joan Mir will also feel confident heading into Portugal. Although still looking for that first podium of the season, the number 36 has been close and, just like Rins, consistent. His record at the rollercoaster is an impressive one too, with two podiums from our two visits to the track last year. Is the time now for Mir’s classic consistency to kick up a gear as we head into Europe?

Behind the Ducati-Suzuki lock out of the top five at COTA came an almighty comeback from Marc Marquez (Repsol Honda Team). The number 93 – never previously defeated if reaching the finish line in Austin – suffered a mechanical problem on his Honda that dropped him to dead last off the line, and then came a choice: a conservative return to competition as hinted at ahead of the event (and which may even have been enough to fight for the win without the extra hurdle) or a somewhat more rocket-fuelled push back to the front? Marc Marquez is Marc Marquez, and what followed was a goosebumps-inducer.

The number 93 got back into the top ten with speed that those he was passing could have considered a professional affront, but it wasn’t quite enough to get back into the podium postcode. Bastianini’s win was the fastest ever at COTA by a margin, so it was by no means going to be easy had the problem not occurred, but Marquez did end up in another great battle against reigning Champion Fabio Quartararo (Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP).

It was seemingly not simply about taking that sixth place in one race, with plenty more on the line in something akin to a 2019 rematch. For those watching, a round of it at a more Diablo-ruled venue would be a welcome second bout too, because it lit the latter stages on fire ahead of Rins’ launch on Miller. Marquez vs Portimão will most definitely be an interesting one though, as it’s a venue the number 93 has not yet mastered as he has so many. What will he have in the locker? And can Pol Espargaro (Repsol Honda Team) get back those Qatar podium vibes?

Marc Marquez

I am looking forward to riding in Portugal, it’s a demanding circuit that’s very physical but a lot of fun to ride. In America we showed our speed and what we are capable of, even if everything did not go perfectly. I want to again be fighting at the front and getting good points after not the best start to the year. We have to keep working on ourselves and the bike to be able to achieve our maximum, but I know myself and Honda are working hard.”

Marquez passing Morbidelli at COTA

If there ever was a Diablo-ruled venue though, the Algarve has been such. When Quartararo won at the track in the Portuguese GP last season, it looked effortless – with five seconds in hand by the flag for a statement win. Then, later in the year the points were much more precious than a full push for glory. So what will the number 20 have in store this time around? It’s one podium so far after a difficult start to the season for Yamaha, and Quartararo has so far been a lonely presence in the upper echelons for the Iwata marque. Will the return to Europe hail a little more for the factory, and its reigning Champion? Franco Morbidelli (Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP) will also be hoping so after a tough start to the season, and the number 21 is no stranger to the podium in Portugal.

That can also be said of another up and down starter to the season: home hero Miguel Oliveira (Red Bull KTM Factory Racing). The number 88 has that awe-inspiring wet win under his belt from Indonesia, but has otherwise had a tougher time of it so far compared to teammate Brad Binder. KTM overall also had a tougher time of it in Texas, with the top ten remaining out of reach on race day. Oliveira absolutely gassed it on first touch with his home track though, disappearing in a real masterclass – so can he find more form on home turf and, perhaps importantly for KTM, can they find consistency again at a venue where they have a few more laps? Binder’s position in the Championship took a dent last time out, and they’ll want to make sure it’s one duff weekend only seeing a handful of points slip away.

With four tough first races in the bag, MotoGP rookies Remy Gardner and Raul Fernandez will be glad to kick off the European fixtures, filled with lay-outs that they both know better. The Australian enjoys going to Portimao, a circuit at which he holds a few records in the Moto2 category, including the best pole, the best race lap, and the all time lap record. In addition, Remy won the Grande Prémio do Algarve back in the penultimate Moto2 round of 2021 , while his team-mate Raul Fernandez won his first Moto2 race here last year at the Grande Prémio de Portugal, held in April 2021.

Remy Gardner

“We just finished the first four races of the season overseas, and they have all been tough ones, including a few in strange conditions. They were necessary to learn the MotoGP class, but I am looking forward to going racing in Europe on tracks that I know better. Portugal is one of my favorite circuits, so I can’t wait to be on Friday to ride there.”

Raul Fernandez and Remy Gardner

Aprilia also had a tougher time of it in Texas. The Noale factory have struggled at the venue before but, coming from victory, they will still have wanted more than 10th and 11th. Having said that, just like KTM, an outlier if remaining an outlier is no reason to expect that form to continue on European turf. Aleix Espargaro (Aprilia Racing) tasted the highs of winning and being Championship leader, now sure to be aiming to get back amongst the podium fight, but team-mate Maverick Viñales also made an important step in Texas despite it being a tougher result on paper: he finished ahead of the number 41.

MotoGP Championship Points Standings

Pos Rider Nat Points
1 BASTIANINI Enea ITA 61
2 RINS Alex SPA 56
3 ESPARGARO Aleix SPA 50
4 MIR Joan SPA 46
5 QUARTARARO Fabio FRA 44
6 BINDER Brad RSA 42
7 MILLER Jack AUS 31
8 ZARCO Johann FRA 31
9 OLIVEIRA Miguel POR 28
10 MARTIN Jorge SPA 28
11 ESPARGARO Pol SPA 23
12 BAGNAIA Francesco ITA 23
13 MARQUEZ Marc SPA 21
14 VIÑALES Maverick SPA 19
15 MORBIDELLI Franco ITA 14
16 NAKAGAMI Takaaki JPN 12
17 MARINI Luca ITA 10
18 BEZZECCHI Marco ITA 7
19 BINDER Darryn RSA 6
20 MARQUEZ Alex SPA 4
21 DOVIZIOSO Andrea ITA 3
22 GARDNER Remy AUS 1

Moto2

The Circuit of the Americas saw some milestones for two Moto2 riders: Tony Arbolino (Elf Marc VDS Racing Team) took his Moto2 maiden win – incidentally also his first visit to the rostrum in the class – and Jake Dixon (Autosolar GASGAS Aspar Team) took a maiden Grand Prix podium in any class. Arbolino has been quick before as a rookie but has taken a definitive step forward this season, and Dixon has been there or thereabouts a few times before bad luck and trouble put paid to the podium. This time, the battle between bringing it home and pushing on to fight it out – in this case with Ai Ogura (Idemitsu Honda Team Asia) – saw the Brit tick the box and complete an impressive trajectory from British Superbike to Moto2 podium.

That makes for an interesting conundrum as to what to expect on the Algarve. Arbolino and Dixon will arrive with a shot of confidence, and the latter certainly has a weight off knowing that first part of the job is done. So can they fight at the front again? It wasn’t just COTA where they were quick, so all signs point to yes. Dixon, in fact, eyes Portugal as a good chance to achieve even more.

Ogura can’t be counted out either. The Japanese rider has made a habit of bothering the podium fight all year and if in doubt, will send – having also unburdened himself fairly early of the need to tick that first Moto2 podium box. He’s now second in the standings too, although he seems to want a win more than much else, so if in doubt, will still send. Team-mate Somkiat Chantra, meanwhile, arrives from a little too much send as the Thai rider came crashing back down to Earth from a stunning first couple of races, and he’ll want to bounce back and overcome his Long Lap Penalty given for that incident as quickly as he can. Sam Lowes (Elf Marc VDS Racing Team), one high profile name caught up in it, will also be keen to head back onto familiar turf and stake a claim back on the frontrunners.

Speaking of bouncing back, Fermin Aldeguer (Lightech Speed Up) is on a mission to do the same having similarly overcooked it in Texas, although having been judged to have had a lot less time to react after the Chantra incident ahead. It’s now a lot of speed and a lot of bad luck for the 54 so far in 2022, but the key is the first bit because the second seldom lasts forever. Portimão is turf he knows much better too, so that is a warning sign for the rest if ever there was.

And now, Celestino Vietti (Mooney VR46 Racing Team) and Aron Canet (Flexbox HP 40). Having tipped themselves favourites to fight for the crown throughout the season, Texas was the first big hurdle for both. First, it seemed like Canet’s lucky day in the standings as his main rival faced his first DNF of the season, and then the pendulum swung swiftly back and the chance was lost – of gaining serious ground and of taking that first Moto2 win. It’s likely both will be straight back at the sharp end though and Vietti still leads the standings, with the gap between the two unchanged but a few riders gaining ground in between. What can they do on the Algarve? Their past form at a venue seems to matter little so far in 2022, although Canet has already visited the podium, so don’t bet against it.

Finally, Red Bull KTM Ajo. 2022 has been a far cry from 2021 so far, but the season is early and the time is plenty. Augusto Fernandez will likely be looking for a points haul in Portugal and to keep it within the limits as he looks to rebuild some consistency, and rookie teammate Pedro Acosta will be an interesting watch. This is the venue the number 51 blitzed in pre-season, and a venue he’s already more than mastered in Moto3™. If the more difficult start to Moto2 has left Acosta feeling he needs to pull a rabbit out the hat, the Algarve seems to set a good stage for him to try.

Moto2 Championship Standings

Pos Rider Nat. Points
1 VIETTI Celestino ITA 70
2 OGURA Ai JPN 56
3 ARBOLINO Tony ITA 54
4 CANET Aron SPA 49
5 CHANTRA Somkiat THA 45
6 LOWES Sam GBR 35
7 DIXON Jake GBR 32
8 FERNANDEZ Augusto SPA 31
9 ROBERTS Joe USA 24
10 SCHROTTER Marcel GER 23
11 NAVARRO Jorge SPA 23
12 ARENAS Albert SPA 22
13 ACOSTA Pedro SPA 20
14 BENDSNEYDER Bo NED 17
15 BEAUBIER Cameron USA 16
16 ALCOBA Jeremy SPA 14
17 ALDEGUER Fermín SPA 9
18 BALTUS Barry BEL 6
19 RAMIREZ Marcos SPA 5
20 GONZALEZ Manuel SPA 5
21 SALAC Filip CZE 2
22 FENATI Romano ITA 2

Moto3

The Moto3 race in Texas boiled up into another classic encounter, and from the unique COTA the grid now heads for the differently unique Autodromo Internacional do Algarve. Jaume Masia (Red Bull KTM Ajo) arrives having put some bad luck to bed and fresh from the top step, and Andrea Migno (Rivacold Snipers Team) was likewise back on the podium – with the two making amends from a more dramatic encounter in Argentina. Dennis Foggia (Leopard Racing), meanwhile, was once again fast, consistent and drama free – something he’s making a habit of in 2022, and something that’s put him 16 points clear in the standings.

Portimão has already been a good hunting ground for the Italian too, with his speed having been consistently impressive and any bad luck purely that. Migno has also been on the rostrum in Portugal more than once and will be hoping to repeat the feat, and it’s now Masia who arrives looking to prove flashes of speed at the venue can return some big points this time around.

On the other side of the coin, Sergio Garcia (Valresa GASGAS Aspar Team) is looking to bounce back from bad luck at COTA and find some more podium form on the Algarve, and teammate Izan Guevara will want to be right back in that rostrum fight. Ayumu Sasaki (Sterilgarda Max Racing Team) heads in with his form seemingly ironed out and shouldn’t be discounted, and the names of the potential frontrunners go on. But then there are the rookies.

There have been some standout performers so far, but on speed alone the honours until this point have to go to Diogo Moreira (MT Helmets – MSI). The Brazilian has had a mix of bad luck and mistakes, to be expected in a first World Championship season, but the pace has been stunning – and the veterans on the grid will be sarcastically pleased to know that on his debut in the Red Bull MotoGP Rookies Cup last season in Portimão, he promptly put it on pole and then came second in the first race. That’s a good omen, and he’ll be hoping to arrive in good shape after his crash in Texas left him needing to be passed fit ahead of the Grande Premio Tissot de Portugal.

Aussie Joel Kelso is eager to add more points to his championship tally as he continues to make progress on the CIP Green Power machine in what is his first full-time crack at the Moto3 World Championship.

Joel Kelso pictured during testing at Portimao in February – Image 2snap

Scott Ogden (VisionTrack Racing Team) is also putting together a quietly impressive campaign and gaining traction, and he’ll want more on more familiar ground. Daniel Holgado (Red Bull KTM Ajo), meanwhile, has had some serious speed of late – but also a few extra and unwanted adventures. He’ll want to iron that out and make pace pay for points in Portugal.

Moto3 Championship Points Standings

Pos Rider Nat Points
1 FOGGIA Dennis ITA 74
2 GARCIA Sergio SPA 58
3 MIGNO Andrea ITA 41
4 GUEVARA Izan SPA 37
5 ÖNCÜ Deniz TUR 37
6 MASIA Jaume SPA 34
7 TATAY Carlos SPA 32
8 SASAKI Ayumu JPN 29
9 TOBA Kaito JPN 27
10 ARTIGAS Xavier SPA 26
11 ROSSI Riccardo ITA 24
12 SUZUKI Tatsuki JPN 23
13 MOREIRA Diogo BRA 20
14 HOLGADO Daniel SPA 16
15 YAMANAKA Ryusei JPN 16
16 BARTOLINI Elia ITA 13
17 MCPHEE John GBR 11
18 ORTOLÁ Ivan SPA 11
19 KELSO Joel AUS 7
20 OGDEN Scott GBR 7
21 FERNANDEZ Adrian SPA 7
22 NEPA Stefano ITA 6

2022 MotoGP Calendar

Date Grand Prix Circuit
06 Mar Qatar Losail
20 Mar Indonesia Mandalika 
03 April Argentina Termas de Rio Hondo
10 Apr Americas Circuit of The Americas
24 Apr Portugal Algarve
01 May Spain Jerez
15 May France Le Mans
29 May Italy Mugello
05 Jun Catalunya Catalunya
19 Jun Germany Sachsenring
26 Jun Netherlands Assen
10 Jul Finland KymiRing
07 Aug Great Britain Silverstone
21 Aug Austria Red Bull Ring
04 Sept San Marino Misano
18 Sept Aragón Aragón
25 Sept Japan Motegi
02 Oct Thailand Chang
16 Oct Australia Philip Island
23 Oct Malaysia Sepang
06 Nov Comunitat Valenciana Valencia

2022 Grande Prémio Tissot de Portugal Schedule

Time Class Event
Friday April 22, 2022
18:00 – 18:40 Moto3 Free Practice Nr. 1
18:55 – 19:40 MotoGP Free Practice Nr. 1
19:55 – 20:35 Moto2 Free Practice Nr. 1
22:15 – 22:55 Moto3 Free Practice Nr. 2
23:10 – 23:55 MotoGP Free Practice Nr. 2
00:10 – 00:50 (Sat) Moto2 Free Practice Nr. 2
Saturday April 23, 2022
18:00 – 18:40 Moto3 Free Practice Nr. 3
18:55 – 19:40 MotoGP Free Practice Nr. 3
19:55 – 20:35 Moto2 Free Practice Nr. 3
21:35 – 21:50 Moto3 Qualifying Nr. 1
22:00 – 22:15 Moto3 Qualifying Nr. 2
22:30 – 23:00 MotoGP Free Practice Nr. 4
23:10 – 23:25 MotoGP Qualifying Nr. 1
23:35 – 23:50 MotoGP Qualifying Nr. 2
00:10 – 00:25 (Sun) Moto2 Qualifying Nr. 1
00:35 – 00:50 (Sun) Moto2 Qualifying Nr. 2
Sunday April 24, 2022
18:20 – 18:30 Moto3 Warm Up
18:40 – 19:00 MotoGP Warm Up
19:10 – 19:20 Moto2 Warm Up
20:20 Moto3 Race
22:00 MotoGP Race
23:30 Moto2 Race

 



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