Otago Daily Times

Dovizioso holds off Marquez in thriller

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MELBOURNE: Ducati rider Andrea Dovizioso breathed new life into the MotoGP championsh­ip yesterday, edging Marc Marquez in a ferocious duel to win a rainsoaked Japanese Grand Prix in Motegi.

In a whiteknuck­le battle in appalling conditions at the Twin Ring circuit, Dovizioso snatched the lead from championsh­ip leader Marquez in a dramatic last lap after the swashbuckl­ing Spaniard made a rare mistake when rounding a corner.

The Italian’s nervejangl­ing win by 0.249sec trimmed the Honda rider’s lead to 11 points with three races left in the season.

Danilo Petrucci finished third on a nonworks Ducati, his fourth podium for the season, while Maverick Vinales’ faint title hopes were all but extinguish­ed after a disappoint­ing ninth for Yamaha.

Spaniard Vinales heads to Phillip Island in Australia 41 points adrift of threetimes MotoGP champion Marquez, who improved to 244 points in the title race.

The dogged Dovizioso was beaming, however, having completed a brilliant race from ninth on the grid.

Defending champion Marquez looked to have it won after he burned past Dovizioso with three laps left but he gave up precious momentum on the final lap with a slide at turn eight.

Thrown from his seat and all but crashing, Marquez did well to regain control but the error allowed Dovizioso enough ground to mount a final daring raid.

‘‘The rear tyre was completely gone,’’ Dovizioso said trackside after grabbing his fifth win of the season.

‘‘But he did a mistake, so I was able to catch him and I did a perfect corner at turn 10.’’

Marquez all but brushed Dovizioso’s rear wheel as he attacked at the last corner but could find no way through.

‘‘It was an amazing race. I mean the two guys that are fighting for the championsh­ip are fighting to the last corner,’’ Marquez said.

Suzuki savoured an encouragin­g weekend, with Andrew Iannone and Alex Rins finishing fourth and fifth respective­ly.

Threetime MotoGP champion Jorge Lorenzo fought to the front briefly in the early laps but faded to sixth for Ducati, while Italian great Valentino Rossi’s forgettabl­e weekend ended midrace with a fall. — Reuters

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