Marco Bezzecchi took pole position for the sprint and feature race at the Austrian MotoGP after topping a scrappy qualifying session at the Red Bull Ring yesterday.
The Aprilia rider would start on the front row ahead of Alex Marquez (Ducati-Gresini) and his Italian compatriot Francesco Bagnaia (Ducati), who is third.
Championship leader Marc Marquez was one of several riders to slide off the track and would start from fourth.
Photo: REUTERS
Bezzecchi, who was second in the last race in Brno, Czech Republic, before the summer break, had to go through Q1 qualifying earlier in the morning to reach Q2 where pole position is decided among the 12 fastest riders.
His fastest lap of 1 minute, 28.060 seconds was 0.016 seconds quicker than Alex Marquez, who would have to serve a long-lap penalty in today’s main race after wiping out Honda’s Joan Mir in an accident last time at the Czech MotoGP.
“It’s always a surprise when you come from Q1 to Q2 because everyone is super quick. To grab pole is fantastic because yesterday we had some problems,” Bezzecchi said. “Pace-wise it will be tough because I am not as quick as them, the KTMs are really good here. I will try and make a good start and then go out and give my all.”
Marc Marquez goes into this 13th round of the 22-race campaign a massive 120 points clear of the pack led by his younger brother.
The sprint took place last night after press time, with the main race to be held later today.
Jesper Boqvist on Tuesday scored the go-ahead goal midway through the third period as the Florida Panthers, after raising their second straight NHL Stanley Cup banner, opened the defense of the title by beating the Chicago Blackhawks 3-2. Mackie Samoskevich — getting his second assist, the fifth two-point game of his career — chipped the puck toward the goal and Boqvist knocked it out of the air for the lead with 10 minutes, 20 seconds left. A.J. Greer and Carter Verhaeghe also had goals for Florida, who got 17 saves from Sergei Bobrovsky. Frank Nazar had a goal and an assist and Teuvo
World No. 3 Alexander Zverev on Monday said that he was playing “terrible tennis” after he was knocked out of the Shanghai Masters by France’s Arthur Rinderknech 4-6, 6-3, 6-2. His exit leaves Novak Djokovic as the tournament’s top-ranked player, increasing the 38-year-old Serb’s chances of winning a record-extending fifth title in the Chinese financial hub. In stifling conditions, world No. 54 Rinderknech came back from a set down to stun an increasingly rattled Zverev into submission. It is the second time the Frenchman has beaten him, after bundling him out of Wimbledon earlier this year. A despondent Zverev told reporters the match had
‘SOMETHING SPECIAL’: Nathan Lukes hit a two-run single and Addison Barger had three of Toronto’s 12 hits as the Blue Jays bounced back After taking down the storied New York Yankees in their own ballpark in their American League Division Series on Wednesday, Toronto Blue Jays manager John Schneider was ready to revel in the triumph. “Start spreading the news,” Schneider said while popping a bottle of bubbly to set off the Blue Jays’ jubilant celebration inside their Yankee Stadium clubhouse. With the party under way, the familiar lyrics from Frank Sinatra’s version of New York, New York — the Yankees’ long-time victory anthem — sounded in the background as roaring Toronto players sprayed each other with booze in the Bronx. This time, it was their
‘IT’S BASEBALL’: In just the second error to end a post-season series in the MLB, the Phillies reliever fumbled a comebacker and threw to home, despite the signal Eyes red, Orion Kerkering on Thursday received words of support from his Philadelphia Phillies teammates. “Just keep your head up. It’s an honest mistake. Just, it’s baseball,” he remembered hearing. “You’ll be good for a long time to come,” they added. “It’s not my fault, then. We had opportunities to score,” was the message he kept getting. Kerkering made a wild throw past home plate instead of tossing to first after mishandling Andy Pages’ bases-loaded comebacker with two outs in the 11th inning. Pinch-runner Kim Hye-seong scored and the Phillies were eliminated with a 2-1 loss that gave the Los Angeles Dodgers a