MotoGP: Jorge Martin claims historic MotoGP title with third-place finish in Barcelona

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Underdog Jorge Martin (Prima Pramac Racing) clinched his maiden MotoGP world championship in a smooth-sailing race in Barcelona on home soil.

The Spaniard settled for third place in the race but held a comfortable points gap to the two-time world champion Francesco Bagnaia (Ducati Lenovo Team) who took the Barcelona GP victory.

Martin cruised to the big victory with consistency across the season, picking up points in a season full of risk-taking and bold moves.

This marks the first time in Prima Pramac’s twenty-year MotoGP history that a satellite rider has proved victorious over the factory team.

Martin is the first independent rider world champion in the recent era of MotoGP, with a glorious season that made history with constant twists and turns.

Although the race was relatively calm, Martin managed to keep his Prima Pramac bike on track with a safe race that earned him his maiden title in the premier class.

Bagnaia did his best all weekend to pick up the points where he could, winning both the sprint and feature race, but it was Martin’s title to lose.

Both riders have put up a fierce fight all season, swapping the championship lead nearly each round as they both hoped to claim the 2024 title.

After securing his title, Martin shared: “It sounds amazing, I don’t know what to say because I’m completely shocked.

“This is for my people, my family, to the people that are supporting me this is for them.

“The last few laps I couldn’t even ride, I started crying a bit, it was a really emotional race.

“Thanks to my people, this is for them, it’s been a long journey with a lot of crashes and big injuries.

“But finally we are here and thanks to all the people and all the fans, also for Valencia with a Spanish rider.

“I hope we can keep improving and enjoy the moment – this is the most important thing, leave the present and enjoy the moment.”

This season has been Martin’s greatest battle yet with huge mistakes potentially costing him a cosy lead in the standings, whether it was his infamous bike swap or those crucial crashes.

His victory is historic not just for independent riders but for private teams in MotoGP, Martin’s title marks the first time in the MotoGP era that an independent team has boasted a championship-winning rider on their bike.

This momentous victory brings a glorious end to the season-long story, giving satellite teams the push they need to fight for the championship against a major constructor like the factory Ducati team.

The Spaniard will move to the Aprilia Racing team next season while his rival remains in the factory Ducati seat alongside the six-time world champion Marc Marquez (Gresini Racing), whose second-place finish secured him a P3 in the riders’ standings.

Despite losing out to Bagnaia with the factory seat, Martin got his fairytale ending in Barcelona with a world title to his name and a spectacular season to note in the history books.

RIDER OF THE DAY: JORGE MARTIN

The new championship winner was as perfect as can be this weekend, with no mistakes or errors to ruin a fairytale weekend.

All Martin had to do is keep his bike above 10th place in both Barcelona races to secure his maiden world title, and he did just that.

Despite Bagnaia’s double victories this weekend, it was Martin whose consistency in picking up points all season that prevailed when it truly mattered.

In a season finale proving Martin’s talents, he cruised to a well-deserved victory.

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