The 2025 Americas MotoGP race had all the makings of an unpredictable roller coaster ride – an aborted race start, a factory Ducati other than Marc Marquez’s winning the race and his younger brother Alex Marquez actually taking the lead in the World Championship. Marc Marquez crashed out of the lead and his teammate Francesco Bagnaia capitalised on that by taking the win in this race. Alex Marquez (who now leads the standings) finished second and Fabio Di Giannantonio took the chequered flag in third place.
- Alex leads the championship by just one point from Marc
- Top five finish for Yamaha with Jack Miller
- Bagnaia takes his 30th MotoGP win
Ducati victorious at COTA, but not Marc
After his victory in the Sprint race on Saturday, Marc Marquez looked nigh unstoppable as he extended his winning streak and he looked all but set to win at his favourite track for a seventh time. And up until he lowsided at Turn 3 on Lap 9, when he already had a very comfortable 2-second lead to his brother Alex, Marc appeared to have it all in the bag.
After that, once Bagnaia took the lead, he pretty much stayed there with a comfortable buffer to the other Marquez sibling. This win was Bagnaia’s first this season and he now has 30 race victories to his name.
Yamaha makes good progress, Miller inside top 5
It wouldn’t be overstating things when we say that Yamaha has fallen from glory in recent years in MotoGP. But a strong pre-season has finally started to translate into credible results for the Iwata-based factory. Jack Miller took his satellite Pramac machine to a top five finish (Fermin Aldeguer’s late race crash is partly to thank here) and was the highest ranked non-Ducati rider.
In fact, this race saw all four Yamaha machines finish in the points. Fabio Quartararo finished 10th, teammate Alex Rins was 11th and Augusto Fernandez (reserve rider standing in for Miguel Oliveira) finished in 13th place.
Bastianini’s P7 silver lining to KTM’s dark cloud
The factory KTM duo of Brad Binder and Pedro Acosta had a good start to the 2025 Americas GP and they were troubling the top five in the early stages of the race. But it wouldn’t last for long as Acosta crashed out first, followed shortly by teammate Binder. And since Maverick Vinales had an issue during the second (and final) race start, the task of upholding KTM’s honour fell squarely on Enea Bastianini’s shoulders.
Thankfully, ‘the Beast’ is known to be a tyre whisperer (an expert at managing tyres throughout race distance) and a strong turn of pace in the later stages of the race saw him cross the chequered flag in seventh place. Teammate Vinales finished 14th to take home two points.
2025 MotoGP standings
A Marquez still leads the standings, but it’s the younger sibling, Alex, who has a slender one point lead over elder brother Marc. With his victory here, Bagnaia has handsomely closed down the deficit to the Marquez brothers and is just 12 points adrift of the lead. The next race will be held at the Lusail International Circuit in Doha, Qatar on April 13.
2025 Americas GP results
2025 Americas MotoGP results | ||
---|---|---|
Position | Rider | Team |
1 | Francesco Bagnaia | Ducati |
2 | Alex Marquez | Gresini Ducati |
3 | Fabio Di Giannantonio | VR46 Ducati |
4 | Franco Morbidelli | VR46 Ducati |
5 | Jack Miller | Pramac Yamaha |
6 | Marco Bezzecchi | Aprilia |
7 | Enea Bastianini | Tech3 KTM |
8 | Luca Marini | Honda |
9 | Ai Ogura | Trackhouse Aprilia |
10 | Fabio Quartararo | Yamaha |
11 | Alex Rins | Yamaha |
12 | Raul Fernandez | Trackhouse Aprilia |
13 | Augusto Fernandez | Pramac Yamaha |
14 | Maverick Vinales | Tech3 KTM |
15 | Lorenzo Savadori | Aprilia |
16 | Somkiat Chantra | LCR Honda |
17 | Johann Zarco | LCR Honda |
NC | Marc Marquez | Ducati |
NC | Brad Binder | KTM |
NC | Pedro Acosta | KTM |
NC | Joan Mir | Honda |
NC | Fermin Aldeguer | Gresini Ducati |