Jaime Alguersuari tells the historic title in Moto3 of the man from Mazarrón, who arrives in Montmeló at his best moment of the season
Pedro Acosta already has his book, the book that summarizes last season’s achievement when he was crowned Moto3 World Champion at the age of 17, breaking all records. The pilot from Mazarrón presented the book on Thursday evening together with the author, former pilot and journalist Jaime Alguersuari, who was surrounded red-handed by a number of collaborators who took part in the literary work, edited by RBA. Sete Gibernau, Alex Crivillé, Carlos Checa and Sito Pons were with the two protagonists on the circuit of Montmeló (Barcelona).
With the title ‘The 17-year-old world champion. The story never told,” the 192-page RBA publication, priced at €18, describes the career of the young rider from Puerto de Mazarrón, who won his first Grand Prix in the Moto2 category last Sunday, until he was the youngest Spanish world champion in history.
Acosta arrives in Montmeló after showing his readiness to compete in the intermediate category. The man from Mazarrón even acknowledges that Catalan is a circuit that “I like and I suppose it could go well with the Moto2 engine”. “We have done a good job in recent races and in the end the victory is the result of our effort,” said Acosta, who finished ninth in the first free practice sessions of the Catalan GP yesterday.
Fermín Aldeguer, from La Ñora, had the 17th fastest time. He needs to improve as his new teammate, Alonso López, set the ninth fastest time. Aldeguer has struggled in the last few races, after a very hopeful start. Acosta, meanwhile, only has the ninth best record of all, but he has a trick. Late in the afternoon session, the Murcian rider set a lap that matched Arón Canet’s morning time, the best on Friday, but he stepped slightly on the green and it was cancelled. In any case, the potential of Acosta is there.
Meanwhile, Aleix Espargaró finished at the top of the schedule after the first two free practice sessions of MotoGP on Friday in Montmeló, with a time 303 thousandths of a second better than second-placed Maverick Vinales, his Aprilia team-mate. And 488 then the third, Enea Bastianini, a shame, since the distance between him and Espargaró was greater than the distance separating him from the thirteenth, Fabio Di Giannantonio, author of the pole in Italy less than a week earlier.
In addition, Pecco Bagnaia, Jorge Martín, Brad Binder, Jack Miller, Alex Rins, the leader Fabio Quartararo and Franco Morbidelli slipped into the top ten.
Source: La Verdad

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