2018 MotoGP Results Friday from Jerez

Michael Scott | May 4, 2018

2018 MotoGP Results Friday from Jerez — Honda took the high ground at the resurfaced and renamed Jerez-Angel Nieto circuit on the first day of practice for Sunday’s Spanish GP. But the most favoured of their riders, Repsol Honda’s Marc Marquez, was only fifth-fastest … and suffered a small crash during the session.

2018 MotoGP Results Friday from Jerez

Cal Crutchlow Jerez MotoGP 2018 Friday
Independent LCR-Castrol team rider Cal Crutchlow took the top slot on the MotoGP time sheets, Friday inside the lap record although not the pole record. (Gold & Goose photo)


Marquez remained the biggest threat, thanks to his consistently rapid race pace. Unlike others fitting soft tyres and going for a banzai lap, he was using race tyres, and had run two more laps than the 25 of race distance when the front folded harmlessly at the first corner.

Independent LCR-Castrol team rider Cal Crutchlow took the top slot on the close-backed time sheets, inside the lap record although not the pole record, and less than three hundredths faster than Repsol Honda’s Dani Pedrosa, still nursing a painful right wrist, who took his third Jerez win here last year.

He in turn was just four thousandths faster than Johann Zarco, top Yamaha again on the satellite Tech 3 bike.

The weather remained balmy and times very close, the top 16 within one second. But with rain striking in the evening and the possibility of more tomorrow, it was the top ten that mattered, for an entry ticket into the “senior” Q2 session, with three fancied runners out of luck: Danilo Petrucci (Pramac Ducati) 11th, Maverick Vinales (Movistar Yamaha) 12th and Alex Rins (Ecstar Suzuki) 14th.

On the right side of the split were Andrea Iannone (Ecstar Suzuki) fourth; then Marquez followed by the two factory Ducatis, Andrea Dovizioso and Jorge Lorenzo. Dovizioso had reverted to his usual wingless state after adopting the aero bodywork to tame the bumps in Austin; and both praised improvements that had made the bike smoother mid-corner, at a track where the Ducati has struggled in the past.

Jack Miller (Alma Pramac Ducati) placed eighth; then Valentino Rossi (Movistar Yamaha). Both factory Yamaha riders were concerned with fading tyre grip. Tenth went to Pol Espargaro (Red Bull KTM), by virtue of a flying lap in the morning, when he had placed third.

2018 MotoGP Results Friday from Jerez