Boris recaps the Valencia MotoGP finale

4 months ago 68
ARTICLE AD BOX

MotoGP 2025

Round 22 – Valencia

AAAAND…IT’S A WRAP.
THANKYOU BALL-BOYS,
THANKYOU LINESMEN

Thus ends the longest MotoGP season ever. Many of the racers will limp off, battered, bruised, and downright busted, both physically and emotionally. It has, by any measure, been a brutal championship.

Bezzecchi is already almost out of shot by the exit of turn one…

Bezz finished his season by giving Aprilia its first back-to-back victory, and with the aid of Raul Fernandez, who has found lots of form at the back-end of the year, its second one-two finish. Bezz’s pace was relentless from start to finish. Each time anyone looked to gain on him, he would just dial it up a shade.

Marco Bezzecchi

And I cannot help but wonder what kind of year it would have been if Jorge Martin had not munted himself big-style at the start of the year, and then again when he came back. This last race was nothing more than a survival exercise for him, and he retired after fourteen laps. He looked and rode rustier than an old sheet of corrugated iron, as everyone would expect. But he is certainly not making any more noises about Aprilia not offering him a competitive bike. Jorge completed a double LLP for earlier sins, then raised his arm in surrender and went home.

Jorge Martin started the race and completed his two long-lap penalties before retiring.

Pedro Acosta once again fried his tyres. I get the impression he wants to punish his bike for not being faster and just rides the buggery out of it. KTM had better pay attention. It can ill afford to lose Pedro. He did everything he inhumanly could to keep Digi from putting his Ducati on the podium, which would have been somewhat of a big deal. Ducati has not been off the podium in a thousand years. But it was not to be. Digi eventually hunted him down and took third.

MotoGP 2025 – Round 22 – Valencia – Pedro Acosta

Alex Marquez, believing himself especially resplendent in his now all-silver leathers, was unable to back up his Sprint Race win on the Sunday. He looked almost threatening to Bezz in the early stages of the main race, but as it wore on, he just went backward.

Alex Marquez ran out of grip after the opening few laps

Raul Fernandez ate him first, then it was Pedro, then it was Digi. And just in case Marquez Light imagined a fifth place was in the offing, Fermin Aldegeur bitched him hard on the last corner and took that away as well.

MotoGP 2025 – Round 22 – Valencia

For his part, Raul Fernandez rode brilliantly, but Bez was not to be denied his victory. He led from pole to flag, never once really looking like ceding his lead.

MotoGP 2025 – Round 22 – Valencia – Marco Bezzecchi the winner ahead of Raul Fernandez and Fabio Di Giannantonio

It was, as it turned out, quite an eventful race. Franky Morbidelli entertained the huge crowd just as the riders were all gridding up, by ramming into the back of the Aleix Espargaro, dropping his bike, and breaking his hand. A WTF moment for both players if ever there was one.

Morbidelli clattered into the back of Aleix Espargaro as they formed up on the grid.

Mir also surprised everyone and himself by not crashing, but he finished in 13th, after having a brief flirtation further up the field and a LLP. HRC’s D-rated concessions were under threat if any of their riders finished seventh or higher, and Luca Marini made sure of they moved to the C class, knowing Mir could not be counted on.

Honda move up a category in the concessions next year after Marini took seventh on Sunday at Valencia

Fermin and Jack exchanged further pleasantries in their year-long feud, which flared up in the Sprint Race when Jack carved chunks off Fermin’s bike with a somewhat indelicate pass. Race Control immediately demanded he lose three places (Jack apparently cost Fermin four places), but Jack rode on, convinced Fermin was as much to blame as Jack himself for not braking harder when Jack was coming under him. Race Control duly handed Jack a LLP.

Jack Miller finished the season with a top ten but finished a lowly seventeenth in the championship standings.Jack Miller signed the season off with a top ten but finished a lowly seventeenth in the championship standings.

Fabulous once again demonstrated how hard he struggles with the Yamaha by putting it into the rocks. He doesn’t do this all that often, so he would have been pushing hard.

Maverick Vinales

Maverick Vinales, also freshly back from injury, was another retirement in the race. I think it will be a while before we see Batmav superheroing around his pits.

Bagnaia was sent off into the gravel to avoid a wild entry by Johann Zarco

Pecco’s season ended much as it had been all year, in a shower of shitty grid positions, stones, and acrimony. This time, it was not of his doing. A hurtling Zarco took him out, and earned himself a LLP. You can actually read both Gigi’s Davide’s faces each time they behold Pecco walking back to his pit. “What has happened to you?” is written all over their dials.

Bagnaia’s race didn’t last four turns…

We have all been asking ourselves that all year, I guess. No-one is disputing Marc Marquez rode magnificently. But I can’t help but consider how dominant Marc would have been if Pecco was on song, if Martin was fit, if Bez had come to terms with his new Aprilia faster, if KTM was able to provide Pedro with a competitive bike, and if Yamaha had maybe introduced its V4 two years ago instead of at the end of this season.

Marc Marquez – 2025 MotoGP World Champion

Yes, I know this is not a sport of “ifs”. Which is why it’s both the cruellest and most exalting competition on the planet. One day you’re a hero, the next race you’re eating rocks. And you know what? It’s only going to get crazier next year, the last year of the current engine. Development is pretty much frozen; most of the riders will be on the market early in the season, and some very exciting rookies are joining the fray.

21-year-old Diogo Moreira from Sao Paolo won the Moto2 World Championship ahead of his MotoGP move in 2026 with Yamaha.

Bring it on.

Valencia MotoGP Results

Pos

Rider

Bike

Time/Gap

1

M. Bezzecchi

Apr

40m52.458

2

R. Fernandez

Apr

+0.686

3

F. Di giannantonio

Duc

+3.765

4

P. Acosta

KTM

+4.749

5

F. Aldeguer

Duc

+8.048

6

A. Marquez

Duc

+8.166

7

L. Marini

Hon

+12.644

8

B. Binder

KTM

+14.582

9

J. Miller

Yam

+15.497

10

E. Bastianini

KTM

+17.460

11

M. Oliveira

Yam

+19.304

12

J. Zarco

Hon

+21.286

13

J. Mir

Hon

+22.079

14

A. Rins

Yam

+23.255

15

N. Bulega

Duc

+26.144

16

A. Fernandez

Yam

+36.854

17

S. Chantra

Hon

+39.136

Not Classified

NC

A. Espargaro

Hon

2 laps

NC

F. Quartararo

Yam

4 laps

NC

M. Viñales

KTM

4 laps

NC

J. Martin

Apr

12 laps

NC

A. Ogura

Apr

21 laps

NC

F. Morbidelli

Duc

26 laps

DNF

F. Bagnaia

Duc

DNF

Valencia MotoGP Top Speeds

The average is from the best five speeds

Pos

Rider

Bike

Average

Speed

1

J. Mir

Hon

338.2

342.0

2

L. Marini

Hon

339.7

340.3

3

E. Bastianini

KTM

337.6

340.3

4

A. Rins

Yam

337.4

340.3

5

J. Zarco

Hon

337.6

338.7

6

B. Binder

KTM

334.5

338.7

7

A. Espargaro

Hon

336.6

338.7

8

M. Viñales

KTM

335.9

337.0

9

F. Di giannantonio

Duc

334.9

337.0

10

A. Ogura

Apr

333.1

337.0

11

J. Martin

Apr

332.4

335.4

12

N. Bulega

Duc

330.3

335.4

13

F. Quartararo

Yam

334.1

335.4

14

R. Fernandez

Apr

334.7

335.4

15

S. Chantra

Hon

331.0

335.4

16

P. Acosta

Ktm

332.7

335.4

17

J. Miller

Yam

335.4

335.4

18

M. Oliveira

Yam

334.0

335.4

19

M. Bezzecchi

Apr

330.0

333.7

20

F. Aldeguer

Duc

331.1

332.1

21

A. Marquez

Duc

331.4

332.1

22

A. Fernandez

Yam

326.4

328.9

23

F. Bagnaia

Duc

252.7

252.7


Final 2025 MotoGP Championship Standings

Pos

Rider

Points

1

M. Marquez

545

2

A. Marquez

467

3

M. Bezzecchi

353

4

P. Acosta

307

5

F. Bagnaia

288

6

F. Di giannantonio

262

7

F. Morbidelli

231

8

F. Aldeguer

214

9

F. Quartararo

201

10

R. Fernandez

172

11

B. Binder

155

12

J. Zarco

148

13

L. Marini

142

14

E. Bastianini

112

15

J. Mir

96

16

A. Ogura

89

17

J. Miller

79

18

M. Viñales

72

19

A. Rins

68

20

M. Oliveira

43

21

J. Martin

34

22

P. Espargaro

29

23

T. Nakagami

10

24

L. Savadori

8

25

A. Fernandez

8

26

S. Chantra

7

27

N. Bulega

2

28

A. Espargaro

29

M. Pirro

2025 MotoGP Constructor Standings

Pos

Constructor

Points

1

Ducati

768

2

Aprilia

418

3

Ktm

372

4

Honda

285

5

Yamaha

247

2025 MotoGP Team Standings

Pos

Team

Points

1

Ducati Lenovo Team

835

2

BK8 Gresini Racing MotoGP

681

3

Pertamina Enduro VR46 Racing Team

493

4

Red Bull KTM Factory Racing

462

5

Aprilia Racing

395

6

Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP Team

269

7

Trackhouse MotoGP Team

261

8

Honda HRC Castrol

238

9

Red Bull KTM Tech3

213

10

LCR Honda

155

11

Prima Pramac Yamaha MotoGP

125


2025 MotoGP Calendar

GP Date Location
1 Mar-02 Thai GP, Chang
2 Mar-16 Argentina GP, Termas De Rio Hondo
3 Mar-30 Americas GP, COTA
4 Apr-13 Qatar GP, Lusail
5 Apr-27 Spanish GP, Jerez
6 May-11 French GP, Le Mans
7 May-25 British GP, Silverstone
8 Jun-08 Aragon GP, Aragon
9 Jun-22 Italian GP, Mugello
10 Jun-29 Dutch GP, Assen
11 Jul-13 German GP, Sachsenring
12 Jul-20 Czech GP, Brno
13 Aug-17 Austrian GP, Spielberg
14 Aug-24 Hungarian GP, Balaton Park
15 Sep-07 Catalan GP, Catalunya
16 Sep-14 San Marino GP, Misano
17 Sep-28 Japanese GP, Motegi
18 Oct-05 Indonesian GP, Mandalika
19 Oct-19 Australian GP, Phillip Island
20 Oct-26 Malaysian GP, Sepang
21 Nov-09 Portuguese GP, Portimao
22 Nov-16 Valencia GP, Valencia
Read Entire Article