Espargaro gives Aprilia its first pole of MotoGP era

Aprilia MotoGP rider Aleix Espargaro took the marque’s first premier-class pole since 2000 in an enthralling Argentina qualifying

Espargaro gives Aprilia its first pole of MotoGP era

Aprilia MotoGP rider Aleix Espargaro took the marque’s first premier-class pole since 2000 in an enthralling qualifying at Argentina’s Termas de Rio Hondo.

The Noale firm’s first pole of the MotoGP era – with its previous having come courtesy of Jeremy McWilliams in the 500cc days – it was also the third of Espargaro’s premier-class career. His other two have come on two different bikes – the Forward Yamaha at Assen in 2014 and the Suzuki in Barcelona in 2015.

Having topped the pre-qualifying FP2, Espargaro immediately reclaimed his place out front at the start of the pole shoot-out, going an initial three tenths clear of the chasing pack with a 1m38.108s.

This looked like it might prove good enough for pole by itself, yet Jorge Martin uncorked a phenomenal final sector to go a quarter of a second clear of the Aprilia man, forcing him to push again.

However, Espargaro put together another strong lap with his final effort, ending up wit ha 1m37.688s that beat Pramac Ducati rider Martin by a tenth and a half.

Aleix Espargaro Aprilia MotoGP Termas

VR46 Ducati rider Luca Marini, who had narrowly snuck into a direct Q2 spot in FP2, followed Martin on the Spaniard’s fastest lap to complete the front row behind him.

Pol Espargaro (Honda) will line up directly behind his brother Aleix in fourth, despite having had to fight through Q1 – having risked compromising his day with an early FP2 crash.

Maverick Vinales had completed an Aprilia 1-2 behind the elder Espargaro in FP2 but had to settle for fifth in qualifying, just ahead of his former Yamaha team-mate Fabio Quartararo.

The reigning champion was left incensed by factory Ducati rider Jack Miller getting in his way on a crucial push lap late on, with Miller placing 11th – having crashed on his first Q2 attempt – and currently under investigation.

The Suzukis of Alex Rins and Joan Mir will head up row three – despite one of Mir’s bikes refusing to fire up at the start of Q2 – joined there by Pramac Ducati’s Johann Zarco.

Takaaki Nakagami (LCR Honda) was set to miss the weekend entirely with a positive COVID-19 diagnosis, but, having tested negative just in time, fought through Q1 and wound up 10th, ahead of Miller and KTM’s Brad Binder – who had one of his KTM RC16s expire in a cloud of smoke during FP2.

Gresini’s championship leader Enea Bastianini and his fellow Ducati rider Enea Bastianini were both within a few hundredths of progressing into Q2 yet ultimately came up short.

Bagnaia, who was frustrated by riders trying to follow him at the end of an FP2 session where his final attempt was thwarted by fellow Valentino Rossi protege Marco Bezzecchi overtaking him at Turn 1 and immediately crashing, couldn’t get anything going on his first run in Q1.

Struggling to keep his Desmosedici anywhere near under control over the bumps, he ultimately improved substantially – but not sufficiently – on his second run.

Yamaha factory rider Franco Morbidelli made it an all-Italian row five behind Bastianini and Bagnaia, with KTM’s Miguel Oliveira – the winner last time out at Mandalika – only managing to place 16th, 0.006s up on rookie Bezzecchi.

Honda tester Stefan Bradl, competing in place of Marc Marquez this weekend, was nine tenths off the pace in Q1 and will complete the grid.

Qualifying Results

Pos Name Team Bike Group 1 Group 2
1 Aleix Espargaró Aprilia Racing Aprilia 1m37.688s
2 Jorge Martin Pramac Racing Ducati 1m37.839s
3 Luca Marini Mooney VR46 Racing Team Ducati 1m38.119s
4 Pol Espargaró Repsol Honda Team Honda 1m38.501s 1m38.165s
5 Maverick Viñales Aprilia Racing Aprilia 1m38.196s
6 Fabio Quartararo Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP Yamaha 1m38.281s
7 Alex Rins Team SUZUKI ECSTAR Suzuki 1m38.455s
8 Joan Mir Team SUZUKI ECSTAR Suzuki 1m38.516s
9 Johann Zarco Pramac Racing Ducati 1m38.537s
10 Takaaki Nakagami LCR Honda IDEMITSU Honda 1m38.523s 1m38.576s
11 Jack Miller Ducati Lenovo Team Ducati 1m38.584s
12 Brad Binder Red Bull KTM Factory Racing KTM 1m38.932s
13 Enea Bastianini Gresini Racing MotoGP Ducati 1m38.566s
14 Francesco Bagnaia Ducati Lenovo Team Ducati 1m38.61s
15 Franco Morbidelli Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP Yamaha 1m38.805s
16 Miguel Oliveira Red Bull KTM Factory Racing KTM 1m38.871s
17 Marco Bezzecchi Mooney VR46 Racing Team Ducati 1m38.877s
18 Andrea Dovizioso WithU Yamaha RNF MotoGP Team Yamaha 1m38.938s
19 Alex Marquez LCR Honda Castrol Honda 1m39.095s
20 Fabio Di Giannantonio Gresini Racing MotoGP Ducati 1m39.126s
21 Raul Fernandez Tech3 KTM Factory Racing KTM 1m39.153s
22 Remy Gardner Tech3 KTM Factory Racing KTM 1m39.159s
23 Darryn Binder WithU Yamaha RNF MotoGP Team Yamaha 1m39.38s
24 Stefan Bradl Honda HRC Honda 1m39.487s