MotoGP Jerez: Fabio Quartararo “never expected to be that slow in qualifying, proper disaster”

“My start”. That was the only positive for Fabio Quartararo during a slow Saturday at the Spanish MotoGP.
Fabio Quartararo, Spanish MotoGP 28 April
Fabio Quartararo, Spanish MotoGP 28 April

Just 16th on the grid after lapping 0.449s slower than last season♓, Quartararo carved through to eighth on the opening lap, when red-flags were shown due to an earlier incident at Turn 2.

The 2021 world cham𝓀pion then knew it would be almost impossible to repeat such a feat on the restart.

“I made one of my best starts ever, best two brakings, then I overtook Dani in Turn 6,” Quartararo recalled. “I will෴ not say it's luck, but when you do it one time, to makꦰe the same is almost impossible.

“The guys in front made a better start [the second time] so I was blocked. If🦂 I♌ start from the 16th place, I'm not able to overtake, and this is the biggest problem.”

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Quartararo finished the opening lap in 14th and - despite accidents ahead for Aleix Esp⛦argaro, Alex Marquez and Takaaki Nakagami - was only twelfth at the finish, 7.5s behind race winner Brad Binder (KTM).

The Monster Yamaha rider spent a💎lmost the whole race trapped behind Fabio di Giannantonio’s Gresini Ducati, setting only the el♔eventh fastest lap.

As with qualifying, Quartararo’s bestܫ race lap was much slower (+0.774s) than he had set in the wheeltracks of race winner Francesco Bagnaia one year ago, on a day when Dani Pedrosa was just 0.258s from Bagnaia’s 2022 record.

“Tough day, especially in qualifying. I nᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚ⁤⁤⁤⁤ᩚ⁤⁤⁤⁤ᩚ⁤⁤⁤⁤ᩚ𒀱ᩚᩚᩚever expected to be ♉that slow,” admitted Quartararo, who hadn't started lower than second on the grid with a MotoGP bike at Jerez.

“In the morning, wit✅h 8 or 10 laps o♛n the tyre, I did 1'37.3. Then I put two new tyres, and I'm [only] three-tenths faster. So this was a proper disaster.

“It's not normal that you make a pace of 1'37.3, then when you put a new tyre, 💙you should get at least minimum six tenths [faster]. But with a different [qualifying] map, different engine brake, low fuel, new tyres, you only improve three-tenths? There is so🌊mething really strange.

“Four years ago, I did a 1'36 here as a rꦬookie. I was riding not so good. And now that I'm feeling I'm a much better rider, I'm doing a 1'37.0, on the limit. So it's really difficult at the moꦫment.

“Then in the race, as soon as w🌳e are behind one rider, we are not able to stay with them... I was behind Di Giannantonio, I had to keep at least one second of distance. That's aജn issue we have had for so many times.”

Fabio Quartararo, MotoGP, Spanish MotoGP, 28 April
Fabio Quartararo, MotoGP, Spanish MotoGP, 28 April

While Quartararo struggled for front feeling, he did not think it 🌳was due to rising tyre pressure from closely followܫing another bike.

“This is not the pro▨blem, it's a problem of grip. The rear tyre is not so bad, but the front is … at Turn 2 [and] Turn 6, I'm not able to lean the bike.

“We are doing 1'38s mid to high, and I was feeling like I could go much faster, but I'm not able because many times I lose ♏the front, and this was a big issue.”

Quartararo’s ongoing woes meᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚ⁤⁤⁤⁤ᩚ⁤⁤⁤⁤ᩚ⁤⁤⁤⁤ᩚ𒀱ᩚᩚᩚan that last year’s Jerez title leader goes into Sun🧸day’s main race just ninth in the championship (-31 points).

🐎Team-mate Franco Morbidelli finished 16th in the Sprint after being involved in the red-flag incident during☂ the initial start.

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