Marquez wins San Marino GP, inches closer to MotoGP crown
Last updated: September 15, 2025 | 10:58
Ducati Lenovo Team's Spanish MotoGP rider Marc Marquez (left) leads Aprilia Racing team's Italian MotoGP rider Marco Bezzecchi (right) during the San Marino Moto GP Grand Prix at the Misano World Circuit Marco Simoncelli, in Misano Adriatico, northern Italy, on Sunday. AFP
Ducati’s Marc Marquez resisted a spirited challenge from Aprilia’s Marco Bezzecchi to win the San Marino Grand Prix on Sunday, taking his revenge after crashing out of the lead in Saturday’s sprint, and inching closer to the MotoGP title.
Bezzecchi had inherited victory in the sprint when Marquez crashed out. This time, however, the determined Spaniard overtook the Aprilia rider on lap 12, having started on the second row of the grid, and never looked back.
Marquez’s 11th race victory of the season takes him to 512 points — a record tally for a MotoGP rider in a single season — and he celebrated his victory by unzipping his leathers and holding his red suit up on the podium like a matador.
Gresini Racing’s Alex Marquez finished a distant third and brother Marc, with a 182-point lead, can clinch his seventh title at the Japanese Grand Prix this month.
“Today I gave everything I had. It’s true that the mistake from yesterday gave me extra concentration, extra power, extra energy,” an exhausted Marc said.
Marc Marquez celebrates on the podium after winning the San Marino Grand Prix. Reuters
“I was just there following him (Bezzecchi), trying to push him always super close, because it’s impossible to do 27 laps without any mistake. And in the end, he did a small mistake on turn eight, and then I lead the race.
“Super important for Ducati, I felt the pressure this weekend.”
Six more rounds remain but Marc can now win his first title since 2019 if he outscores Alex by just three points in Japan.
At the start, Marc had a superb launch off the line and he veered to the outside to quickly move up to second behind polesitter Bezzecchi
while Alex was pushed down to third.
As the top three streaked away, Yamaha’s Fabio Quartararo found it difficult to maintain that pace and he was soon battling with KTM’s Pedro Acosta, who eventually found his way past the former champion to chase the leading pack.
But Acosta’s hopes of fighting for the podium went up in smoke when he retired with a broken chain, with the young Spaniard furiously wagging his finger at the bike after he stopped on the side of the track.
Ducati’s Francesco Bagnaia had another race to forget in a nightmare season for the twice champion who crashed out of seventh place, his third place in the championship now seriously under threat from Bezzecchi.