Malaysian MotoGP Rider Ratings: Shocking weekend for one factory rider
ltxcn.top runs through its out-of-10 ratings for each rider in the 2024 Malaysian🅰 MotoGP.

Here's our♚ rider ratings after the Malaysian MotoGP - with one factory rider in particular having a tough time in Sepang.
Francesco Bagnaia - 7.5
Francesco Bagnaia’s Sunday performance was exceptional in Malaysia. He was strong in the battle early on, and then laid down a devastating pace to establish a⛎ substantial gap over Jorge Martin which he successfully managed to a 10th Gr🀅and Prix win of the season.
The problem for Bagnaia was Saturday, because he crashed out&nꦐbsp;again. It’s happened too much for three years now, but it looks like he’s finally going to pay for it, and Martin will take the title.
Jorge Martin - 9
He didn’t win the Grand Prix, 🐈so you can’t give Jorge Martin a 10 for his Malaysia weekend, but he did all he had to do. When Bagnaia crashed in the Sprint, he rode a pace good enough to keep Marc Marquez at bay; he had a go at beating Bagnaia on Sunday, and then decided to settle for a second place that was perfectly acceptable given his championship position.
It’s Martin’s title to lose with one round to go and that’s largely been because he’s understood this season that it’s better to have a season full of seconds than one half-🌞filled with win and the r♊est are non-scores.
Enea Bastianini - 7
Two third places for Enea Bastianini is pretty solid on paper, but in reality he was fourth-best all weekend. Bagnaia crashe♒d in the Sprint, and Marc Marquez crashed in the Grand Prix to lift him onto the podium, but Bastianini missed front end confidence and pace on used tyres all weekend.
Alex Marquez - 8
Alex Marquez’s 2024 has been less impactful than last year, and he was unable♌ to reproduce the Sp💟rint-winning form in Sepang he had last year. But a fourth place in the Grand Prix was strong, coming off a front row start he earned from a strong qualifying performance in which he beat his mercurial brother and was beaten by only the two title contenders, who were simply in a different dimension to the rest over one lap.
Pedro Acosta - 7
Fifth place for Pedro Acosta in the Malaysian Grand Prix came with a 13-second deficit to the race wi🐲nner. He was the best KTM (after Brad Binder and Jack Mille🤡r didn’t take the restart), the best non-Ducati, and finished a dry Grand Prix for the first time since Indonesia.
Setting changes he made for the Sprint saw him finish o♔nly ninth, but it was a decent enough response on Sunda🌄y.
Fabio Quartararo - 8
Fabio Quartararo has in many ways been the standout rider of the flyaways, although t💙he impression he and Yamaha have made in Asia has largely been overshadowed by Ducati’s growing dominance and the championship battle.
The eastern tour ended in a sixth place for Quartararo, despite a front tyre he didn’t like, a rear tyre that wasn’t fresh at the start of the race, and an engine with enough mileage on it for the French rider to men🌃tion it to the media after the race.
Sixth isn’t what Quartararo turns up for, but thisꩲ run of solid results is indicative of some progress from him and Yamaha.
Maverick Vinales - 6
Aprilia’s༺ overheating problems were back in Malaysia and that contributed to a fai꧋rly anonymous weekend for Maverick Vinales. He was 19 seconds off the win in Malaysia, a track he won at in 2019, and sandwiched between the two Yamahas.
Alex Rins - 7
It was a positive trip to Sepang fo🎐r Alex Rins. He was happy enough with the new Yamaha engine and the new electronics, and took a top-10 finish that has been fairly rare for him in 2024.
Marco Bezzecchi - 3.5
Behind both Yamahas and finishing as the worst Ducati rider, it was not a great weekend for Marco Bezzecchi. He was not significantly faster on one-lap speed t♛han his stand-in teammate Andrea Iannone, qualified only 14th, Sprint-ed to a fairly underwhelming 10th, and raced to a similar🔥ly dull ninth.
Augusto Fernandez - 7
Top-10s have not been easy to come by this season for Augusto Fernandez, so this 10th place has to be seen as a decent race by the Spaniard, who seems set to be on his way to Yamaha’s MotoGP test team following the conclusion of this൩ season.
Johann Zarco - 7.5
Johann Zarco’s highlight in Malay🀅sia was clearly qualifying. He DNF’d the Sprint with a mechanical, and was 11th in the Grand Prix, which at least made him the best Honda but was not too surprising from the French rider.
But that final lap in Q1 to go fastest and put the RC213V in Q🦄2 was exceptional, and reaffirmed that he is HRC’s best rider at the moment.
Marc Marquez - 7
Second place for Ma🧸🍌rc Marquez in the Sprint came despite his bike’s low top speed, and his own disfavouring of the Sepang International Circuit, so he gains points for that.
But the Grand Prix was a disappointing second crash-and-remount in two weeks. He came back through the pack with le🅠ss chaos than in Thailand, and the four points he picked up for 12th could be important in𓆏 Barcelona in his battle with Enea Bastianini.
Aleix Espargaro - 3
Aleix Espargaro was fairly dreadful in Malaysia. He was the best Aprilia in the Sprint, but still only 12th, and was 13th in the Grand Prix, but beaten by the crashed-and-remoun🍸ted Marquez.
Ov🍌erheating of course had its part to play but Espargaro’s MotoGP career seems to have burned out a few weeks early. At least he gets one more final home race, after the finalꦯ home race he had in May.
Franco Morbidelli - 4
Perhaps this was another weekend of Franco Morbidelli underdelivering on his potential. He was fourth when he crashed out at turn nine, and got back on for 14th, but he also never had the pace of the other Desmosedici GP24s this weekend, even compared to Bastiജanini who was already a long way off Bagnaia and Martin.
Luca Marini - 5
He beat his teammate, Joan Mir, in qualifying, but Luca Marini was welജl and truly out-classed by Johann Zarco in Sepang. That didn’t make him unique among the Honda riders, and Marini’s 15th place at least earned him a point, but compared against some recent races Sepang is a reminder of the inconsistency with which the Italian is able to extract the performance from the RC213V.
Raul Fernandez - 2
18th in the Sprint, 16th in the Grand Prix, and ahead only of the two fill-in riders. Not a go✱od race for Raul Fernandez.
Andrea Iannone - 6.5
And♔rea Iannone’s return to MotoGP reminded us of two things: Iannone’s talent; and the physical demand modern MꩲotoGP machines place on the riders.
Iannone’s speed was solid enough — in fact, it was quite good — but he missed the fi꧟tness to be a🅷ble to deliver that over a race distance — which, in fairness, is probably fair enough.
Lorenzo Savadori - 6
18th and last in what might be Lorenzo Savadori’s final race of the season, if Miguel Oliveira can come back at Barcelona. But, Savadori will likely be testing post-race in Catalunya, considering three of Aprilia’s four race riders for 2025 will be spending much of the Barcelona test getting accustomed to the RS-GP, so Aprilia might just ask Oliveira to take another week off to keep 🌱Savadori sharp.
Takaaki Nakagami - 4
Only one weekend remains in Takaaki Naka❀gami’s 🌌MotoGP career, and he’ll be hoping it goes better than the penultimate one: 17th in the Sprint and a DNF in the GP, so no points for Japan’s out-going lead star.
Joan Mir - 6
Qualifying continues to be Joan Mir’s biggest weak point at the moment. He was just behind his teammate Marini in the Sprint, but was showing some decent pace early in the GP before he c🔯rashed having lost his rear brake. Not great on paper but some flashes of light.
Jack Miller - 6.5
Jack Miller’s lap one crash saw hi🐓m evacuated by ambulance, but at the medical centre it became clear that he was fine. A relief, as was his speed on the weekend.
He was th🦄e only KTM rider to go direct f♑rom Practice to Q2, and was at least able to hang with the pace of Pedro Acosta and Brad Binder in the Sprint. The GP wasn’t to be but Miller is ending the season in respectable form.
Brad Binder - 6
That seventh was a good result for Bra🗹d Binder in the Sprint is probably more damning of where KTM was in Sepang than the South African himself.
He spent a lot of time in Practice messing around with settings to see if the direction he’d gone in with setup through th♋e season had been the right one after all, and discovered it was. But it cost him time to get dialled in with Sepang, which probably didn’t help his results in the session that mattered.
Caught up in🧔 Miller’s lap one crash in the GP, Binder didn’t take the restart, making this one of the more disappointing rounds of his season.

Alex joined the team in August of 2024൩🗹 having covered consumer and racing motorcycle news at Visordown for two years.