MotoGP

Quartararo: Portugal MotoGP win special after tough to accept 2022 form

Quartararo: Portugal MotoGP win special after tough to accept 2022 form

The reigning world champion stormed to his first win since the 2021 British GP on Sunday at Portimao, having taken the lead from Suzuki’s Joan Mir on the fourth lap of 25.

Quartararo proceeded to streak well-spoken of the field to a winning margin of 5.4 seconds to take the lead in the championship for the first time in his title defence.

Visibly emotional on the podium without the race, Quartararo says his team applauding him for finishing seventh last time out in Americas was “tough to accept” – which only heightened what he felt well-nigh his Portimao win.

“It was quite a long time since I achieved the victory, I think it was in August at Silverstone,” Quartararo, said.

“But moreover the tough times that I had this year. It was a short time, four races, but when you win the championship you unchangingly want to fight then for the championship.

“For me it was tough to winnow that I was happy to finish seventh in Austin considering I improved a lot my race pace from the previous year [when I was second], we have not made a massive resurgence on the bike, we know what is going on.

“So, of course, it’s tough for me to see the team applauding me for P7.

“In my mind P7 is not good, but I was happy.

“But today to fight for the victory then was something special, something emotional considering I have unchangingly said I will fight the same for P1, P5 or P10.

“And of undertow today it was much increasingly fun, and that’s why I got that emotional.”

\"Fabio

Fabio Quartararo, Yamaha Factory Racing

Photo by: Gold and Goose / Motorsport Images

Quartararo has been hair-trigger of the lack of progress Yamaha has made with the top speed of the velocipede in 2022, but said he wasn’t as hampered by that at Portimao considering he was so strong out of the final corner onto the main straight.

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“Basically, I never the said the velocipede was not working,” he added.

“The velocipede is working in a way that when it’s not working you don’t fight for this kind of position.

“It’s true the velocipede is missing a lot of top speed, but in this track I was feeling not bad with the top speed considering in the last corner I was exiting super-fast and out of the hill I was trying to manage to get not a lot of wheely and I was super strong there.

“I think they key point for me was the last sector and for me it was the magnitude of at this track I felt much better. But nothing really changed.”

Quartararo’s 2023 future remains unshut and his management has been in talks with other manufacturers outside of Yamaha.

When asked if today’s result will make a difference in deciding his future, Quartararo simply replied “no”.

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