1. Martín’s clean slate.
The Madrid driver did not let himself be dragged down by last weekend’s disappointment in Australia. In Thailand he was the fastest in the morning practice, in the afternoon he took first place after the start and reached the finish line without seeing any driver in front of him.
2. All with the same tire.
This time there are no strategies. All drivers came out of the race with the same ones, eliminating the tire factor that has been so important in the final result of some of the last GGPP.
3. Bagnaia’s bad start.
For someone playing for the title, qualifying sixth on the starting grid and coming in seventh at the finish line isn’t exactly a good balance. Especially when your biggest rival starts from pole and wins the race.
4. The ‘disrespect’ towards Ducati riders.
If anyone doubted whether Ducati would command its riders, after watching the race today they were dispelled by the merciless ax blows in the early stages of the race by Alex Márquez and Johann Zarco at Pecco Bagnaia. ruthless.
5. Márquez’s reintegration into trademark braking.
When he has minimally competitive tools, he is a fixture in fights for victories; When, like today, he has the bike he has… He starts eighth from the grid and enters fourth, making up in cum laude braking what he loses in acceleration. Hats off.
Source: La Verdad

I’m Rose Herman and I work as an author for Today Times Live. My expertise lies in writing about sports, a passion of mine that has been with me since childhood. As part of my job, I provide comprehensive coverage on everything from football to tennis to golf.