Di Giannantonio wins Catalan MotoGP Grand Prix, Alex Marquez injured in horror crash

The 2024 Catalan MotoGP Grand Prix delivered a dramatic day of high-speed racing defined by shocking crashes, two red-flag stoppages, and a fairy-tale victory for Ducati’s Fabio Di Giannantonio on Sunday. The Italian rider secured his first MotoGP win in three years despite sustaining a hand injury early in the event from debris of a catastrophic crash that sidelined reigning Catalan winner Alex Marquez.

Trouble struck the circuit before the race could even find its rhythm. Pole-sitter Pedro Acosta suffered a sudden technical failure that cut his engine power mid-corner, leaving Alex Marquez with no time to avoid a collision. Marquez was flipped violently off his Ducati-Gresini bike, which was completely destroyed in the impact. The 2023 race winner and Saturday sprint champion was airlifted to a local hospital for urgent care, just one week after his older brother – eight-time world champion Marc Marquez – suffered a violent crash at Le Mans that left him injured.

Race officials immediately called the first red flag to clear debris from the track. When racing resumed, disaster struck again on the opening corner: French rider Johann Zarco collided with Luca Marini and defending series champion Pecco Bagnaia, sending Zarco sliding off the track and forcing a second red-flag stoppage. Zarco was transported by ambulance for mandatory medical evaluations after the incident. The race restarted with 12 laps remaining on the calendar.

When the final run to the checkered flag got underway, Acosta held the lead for most of the remaining distance, until Di Giannantonio made a decisive overtake with just two laps left to claim the top spot. Joan Mir and Fermin Aldeguer also slipped past Acosta, who was taken out in a late collision with Ai Ogura not long before the finish line. Aldeguer rounded out the podium in third, while Mir crossed the line in second – though both Mir and several other riders now face official investigations over potential violations of MotoGP’s tyre pressure regulations.

In the overall championship standings, current leader Marco Bezzecchi endured a difficult weekend but still managed to expand his gap at the top. His closest title contender, Jorge Martin, was caught up in a crash caused by Raul Fernandez’s aggressive inside overtake, marking Martin’s fifth crash of the entire weekend. Bezzecchi crossed the line in sixth, pushing his championship lead to 13 points over Martin.

For Di Giannantonio, the win was almost derailed before he even got to the final restart: the Italian suffered a hand injury when a loose wheel from Marquez’s destroyed bike hit him during the first crash. But he pushed through the pain to secure the milestone victory. After taking the checkered flag, he opened his post-race comments by prioritizing the health of fallen riders over his own win.
“I’m so happy. But first of all I was really worried about all the riders who crashed,” Di Giannantonio told reporters. “Today has not been an easy day for everybody. I really hope that Alex (Marquez) is fine. We’ve been really lucky. We know that our sport is amazing. We try to give an amazing show, we are humans, we are in danger.”