World champion Marc Marquez won the season-opening Qatar Grand Prix on Sunday just a month after breaking his leg.
The Honda rider fought off a thrilling, wheel-to-wheel challenge from nine-time champion Valentino Rossi on a Yamaha to win by just 0.259 seconds.
Dani Pedrosa, on the second factory Honda, took third.
Marquez, who broke his right leg in a dirt-bike accident in his native Spain at the end of last month, came into the new season having become the youngest ever world champion last year.
“I enjoyed the race a lot, I did not expect the result, but yesterday I had a good feeling fighting with Valentino,” 21-year-old Marquez said.
Rossi, seeking what would have been his 81st win in the elite MotoGP class, said he could take a lot out of the race, having been written off last season as a spent force.
“At the beginning I was a little not clear in my mind, do I attack? Then I said ‘I go, I try’, but after Marc was stronger,” he said. “I had the potential to try at the end but unfortunately he was a little too far, but anyway it’s a great result and I hope to continue like this.”
In a thrilling race beneath the Losail circuit floodlights, 2010 and 2012 world champion Jorge Lorenzo was done and dusted inside the first lap.
The Spaniard, the runner-up to Marquez in the world championship last year, had started in fifth place, but snatched the lead on the first bend.
However, he suffered a dramatic race-ending crash at the end of the opening lap on his factory Yamaha, which must have been painful for a man who twice broke his collarbone last year.
“It was a high speed crash, but not on the dangerous side,” Lorenzo said. “I made the mistake of a junior. The tyres are different from last year and the temperatures are colder than they were in qualifying. I didn’t take these things into account.”
Germany’s Stefan Bradl, on a Honda, soon found himself in the front, but his evening also ended prematurely when he came off the track on the ninth lap.
Rossi, who had started in 10th place on the grid, then took the lead from Marquez and held it for five laps as the 35-year-old Italian sensed a first win since Assen last year.
However, Marquez, on the faster Honda, slipped by him on the 13th lap.
They swapped the lead twice in a nail-biting penultimate lap, but Marquez had too much power for the Italian great.
Pedrosa was happy to finish in third at a track he dislikes.
“All the time we had tyre issues, the track is very slippery and I felt
like the grip wasn’t there,” he said. “I don’t like this track so I am happy with third.”
Australia’s Jack Miller, riding a KTM, won the Moto3 race to capture his maiden career triumph.
Spanish duo Alex Marquez, the younger brother of MotoGP world champion Marc, and Efren Vasquez, both on Hondas, took second and third respectively.
The 19-year-old Miller, who was seventh in the world championship last year, dueled with Marquez over the course of the 18-lap race and made the most of a late error by the Spaniard on the last lap.
In a thrilling conclusion, the top six riders were covered by just 0.586 seconds.
In Moto2, Spain’s Esteve Rabat saw off fellow Kalex riders, Japan’s Takaaki Nakagami and Finland’s Mika Kallio for victory.
Rabat, who was third in the championship last year, claimed a fourth career win after a race which saw four riders — Josh Herrin, Johann Zarco, Alex De Angelis and Xavier Simeon — involved in a spectacular crash on the first lap.
The MotoGP championship now moves on to Austin, Texas for the Grand Prix of the Americas on April 13.
The lights dimmed and the crowd hushed as Karoline Kristensen entered for her performance. However, this was no ordinary Dutch theater: The temperature was 80°C and the audience naked apart from a towel. Dressed in a swimsuit and to the tune of emotional music, the 21-year-old Kristensen started her routine, performed inside a large sauna, with a bed of hot rocks in the middle. For a week this month, a group of wellness practitioners, called “sauna masters,” are gathering at a picturesque health resort in the Netherlands to compete in this year’s Aufguss world sauna championships. The practice takes its name from a
‘SOURCE OF PRIDE’: Newspapers rushed out special editions and the government sent their congratulations as Shohei Ohtani became the first player to enter the 50-50 club Japan reacted with incredulity and pride yesterday after Shohei Ohtani became the first player in Major League Baseball to record 50 home runs and 50 stolen bases in a single season. The Los Angeles Dodgers star from Japan made history with a seventh-inning homer in a 20-4 victory over the Marlins in Miami. “We would like to congratulate him from the bottom of our heart,” top government spokesman Yoshimasa Hayashi told reporters in Tokyo. “We sincerely hope Mr Ohtani, who has already accomplished feat after feat and carved out a new era, will thrive further,” he added. The landmark achievement dominated Japanese morning news
Roger Federer on Wednesday said that staying involved with tennis in retirement helped him avoid feeling “like an alien” ahead of this week’s Laver Cup in Berlin. Federer, who helped create the tournament, retired at the Laver Cup in London two years ago and has since stayed involved with the competition as an ambassador. “I’m happy I went back right away to some tournaments,” the 43-year-old told reporters. “I feel I ripped the Band-Aid off quite quickly and when I walk around the tennis sites I still feel I belong there,” he said. “I don’t feel like an alien, which is a
Japanese players are moving to English soccer in record numbers and more look set to follow with clubs attracted by their quality, strong work ethic and value for money. Kaoru Mitoma is the standout talent of five Japanese players in the English Premier League, with eight more in the Championship and two in League One. Liverpool midfielder Wataru Endo, the captain of Japan, believes his compatriots are “being held in higher esteem” by English clubs compared with the past. “The staff at Liverpool ask me about lots of Japanese players, not necessarily with a view to a transfer, but just saying this or