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Sachsenring procession: Alex Marquez says new MotoGP grid rules made overtaking difficult

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Alex Marquez believes MotoGP’s new starting grid rules made it quite difficult for riders to gain position at the start of the German Grand Prix sprint.

The Gresini rider lined up second on the grid for Saturday’s half-distance race at the Sachsenring but was unable to get the jump on his brother Marc Marquez, who led comfortably from pole position on his factory Ducati. 

There were few changes elsewhere inside the top 10, with Trackhouse rider Ai Ogura briefly passing Fabio di Giannantonio into Turn 1 and Aprilia’s Jorge Martin making a move on Francesco Bagnaia later in the lap.

The relatively quiet start to the sprint came after MotoGP made a major change to the grid formation this weekend, with the distance between each rider increased from three to four metres.

This revision was made on safety grounds following a crash-heavy Catalan GP, where Johann Zarco suffered a major knee injury after his leg got collected in Francesco Bagnaia’s Ducati at the restart.

Alex Marquez, who himself got injured in the same Barcelona race through no fault of his own, said the new start rules severely limited overtaking opportunities at the start.

“My idea was to attack him on the start, but now with the new rules that we have more space between riders and more space between lines, it's quite difficult to gain position,” he explained.

“If the other one didn't make a big mistake, it's so impossible to arrive even in parallel.”

Fabio Di Giannantonio, VR46 Racing Team

Fabio Di Giannantonio, VR46 Racing Team

Following an uneventful opening lap, the Sachsenring race quickly descended into a procession, with Marc Marquez successfully holding off his brother through the remaining laps.

Alex Marquez himself came under pressure from VR46’s Fabio di Giannantonio on the final tour, but the latter never came close enough to attempt a move.

There were no major changes outside the top three either, with Ogura finishing fourth and Martin unable to pass Fernandez, who was compromised by back pain after suffering a compression shock in qualifying.

Di Giannantonio believes the lack of action was primarily down to the track layout, which made it harder for riders to follow each other without compromising their tyre life. 

“We know that this track is really, really difficult to overtake on,” he said. “Once you go just behind another rider, the front tyre gets temperature, and with all the corners being in the angle, it's really difficult to keep the pace and then try to overtake. You can do it, but it's pretty risky.

“So I had to do the move on Ogura at the beginning to try to be there, but then I tried to have a little space in the middle of the race to save the front tyre, but it was not enough for the end. It was just too risky to overtake Alex.”

Alex Marquez, Gresini Racing, Marc Marquez, Ducati Team

Alex Marquez, Gresini Racing, Marc Marquez, Ducati Team

The Italian said the situation was made worse by the fact that he felt quicker than race winner Marquez, who was unable to push at full capacity due to his physical limitations.

“I had better speed to go faster,” he said. “It's 100% true that Marc was not pushing 100%. I think Marc had something more on the pace, but he was controlling, but it's normal. 

“For us, I was there trying to be with them, but then when you are behind, it really becomes a nightmare to just keep the pace. Even if you are faster, you cannot keep the pace, so you really need some room.”

Di Giannantonio explained that he deliberately dropped back a few tenths behind Alex Marquez to run in clean air, as following a rider too closely left his bike on the “edge”.

“You can do different lines to try to save the rear tyre, but then whatever you do to save the rear tyre, it destroys the front tyre a little,” he said.

“When you are behind a rider almost three-fourths of the lap, just behind, full in the edge, it's really difficult then to save it. So once you arrive pretty close, you have just the front moving all the time.

“It was a bit strange to race like this, but it's like this, so we need to adapt, and we need to try to do something better for tomorrow to try to attack.”

Read Also: Marco Bezzecchi withdraws from German GP after suffering fracture in qualifying MotoGP German GP: Marc Marquez leads Ducati sprint sweep

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Injured Johann Zarco hit with double long lap for Barcelona crash

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Johann Zarco will have to serve a double long lap penalty when he finally returns to MotoGP action following his heavy crash at the Catalan Grand Prix in May. 

The sanction was announced ahead of this weekend's German Grand Prix, which will be the fifth successive race the injured Zarco has missed since the Barcelona incident.

Zarco, who is targeting a September return to racing aboard the LCR Honda, is being punished for his role in the very accident that resulted in him sustaining serious knee injuries that have kept him on the sidelines. 

The crash took place immediately after the race was restarted for the first time. It was initially stopped as a result of the frightening crash involving Pedro Acosta and Alex Marquez

While the stewards' decision may conform to the letter of the law, it comes after MotoGP organisers received criticism for their handling of events following the initial Acosta/Marquez accident - particularly after the subsequent one involving Zarco. 

The Zarco crash, which also took out Luca Marini and Francesco Bagnaia, led to a second stoppage. Some, including Acosta, suggested the event should have been called off entirely following a second major shunt.

Johann Zarco, Team LCR Honda, Francesco Bagnaia, Ducati Team crash

Johann Zarco, Team LCR Honda, Francesco Bagnaia, Ducati Team crash

Zarco himself had been struck by debris thrown up by the Acosta/Marquez incident, and admitted that he was not in a fit state to take the restart. Some critics have suggested that decisions around taking restarts should not be left to adrenaline-fueled riders.

The wording of the decision released on Thursday is as follows:

"On 17TH May 2026 at 14:53:20 during the MotoGP Race of the MONSTER ENERGY GRAND PRIX OF CATALONIA at Turn 1 you caused a crash, involving riders #10 MARINI and #63 BAGNAIA.

"This contravenes the specific instructions given to MotoGP™ competitors and teams. It is therefore an infringement of Article 1.21.2 of the FIM Grand Prix World Championship Regulations.

"Following the Penalty Protocols issued to teams, this action was deemed to be an incident of Type MGP-CC5: START OF THE RACE / OPENING LAP. Actions that create a dangerous situation for multiple riders and/or causing a crash."

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2026 MotoGP German Grand Prix – How to watch, session times & more

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Germany will play host to the final round before MotoGP's now traditional summer shutdown.

Marc Marquez is easily the most successful grand prix rider at the Sachsenring, having won 12 races at the 3.6km venue across all classes. The track's anti-clockwise layout is expected to play to his strengths again, making him the favourite for victory this weekend.

Further, the Ducati rider arrives at the German Grand Prix having won two out of the last three races, including back-to-back races in Balaton Park and Brno.

Aprilia, however, continues to lead all three championships, with Jorge Martin heading the riders' standings from team-mate Marco Bezzecchi.

MotoGP German GP schedule

Your time   Event Date
German GP Jul 12   14:00  
FREE PRACTICE 1   Jul 10   10:45
PRACTICE   Jul 10   15:00
FREE PRACTICE 2   Jul 11   10:10
QUALIFYING 1   Jul 11   10:50
QUALIFYING 2   Jul 11   11:15
SPRINT   Jul 11   15:00
RACE   Jul 12   14:00

MotoGP German Grand Prix session timings

SESSION BST CEST (UTC+2) ET (UTC−4) PT (UTC−7) AEST (UTC+10) JST (UTC+9) IST (UTC+5:30)
Friday       
FP109:4510:4504:4501:4518:4517:4514:15
Practice14:0015:0009:0006:0023:0022:0018:30
Saturday       
FP209:1010:1004:1001:1018:1017:1013:40
Qualifying09:5010:5004:5001:5018:5017:5014:20
Sprint14:0015:0009:0006:0023:0022:0018:30
Sunday       
Race13:0014:0008:0005:0022:0021:0017:30

2026 MotoGP German Grand Prix session timings in the UK and Portugal

Friday 10 July 2026

Free Practice 1: 09:45 - 10:30 BST Practice: 14:00 - 15:00 BST

Saturday 11 July 2026

Free Practice 2: 09:10 - 9:40 BST Qualifying: 09:50 - 10:30 BST Sprint: 14:00 BST

Sunday 12 July 2026

Race: 13:00 BST

2026 MotoGP German Grand Prix session timings in Europe 

Friday 10 July 2026

Free Practice 1: 10:45 - 11:30 CEST Practice: 15:00- 16:00 CEST

Saturday 11 July 2026

Free Practice 2: 10:10 - 10:40 CEST Qualifying: 10:50 - 11:30 CEST Sprint: 15:00 CEST

Sunday 12 July 2026

Race: 14:00 CEST

2026 MotoGP German Grand Prix session timings in the US (Eastern Time)

Friday 10 July 2026

Free Practice 1:  04:45 - 05:30 ET Practice:  09:00- 10:00 ET 

Saturday 11 July 2026

Free Practice 2: 04:10 - 04:40 ET Qualifying: 04:50 - 05:30 ET   Sprint: 09:00 ET 

Sunday 12 July 2026

Race: 08:00 ET 

2026 MotoGP German Grand Prix session timings in the US (Pacific Time)

Friday 10 July 2026

Free Practice 1:  01:45 - 02:30 PT Practice:  06:00- 07:00 PT

Saturday 11 July 2026

Free Practice 2: 01:10 - 01:40 PT Qualifying: 01:50 - 02:30 PT Sprint: 06:00 PT

Sunday 12 July 2026

Race: 05:00 PT

2026 MotoGP German Grand Prix session timings in Australia

Friday 10 July 2026

Free Practice 1: 18:45 - 19:30 AEST Practice: 23:00- 00:00 AEST

Saturday 11 July 2026

Free Practice 2: 18:10 - 18:40 AEST Qualifying: 18:50 - 19:30 AEST Sprint: 23:00 AEST

Sunday 12 July 2026

Race: 22:00 AEST

2026 MotoGP German Grand Prix session timings in Japan

Friday 10 July 2026

Free Practice 1: 17:45 - 18:30 JST  Practice: 22:00 - 23:00 JST 

Saturday 11 July 2026

Free Practice 2: 17:10 - 17:40 JST  Qualifying: 17:50 - 18:30 JST Sprint: 22:00 JST

Sunday 12 July 2026

Race: 21:00 JST

2026 MotoGP German Grand Prix session timings in India

Friday 10 July 2026

Free Practice 1: 14:15 - 15:00 IST  Practice: 18:30 - 19:30 IST

Saturday 11 July 2026

Free Practice 2: 13:40 - 14:10 IST  Qualifying: 14:20 - 15:00 IST Sprint: 18:30 IST

Sunday 12 July 2026

Race: 17:30 IST

Can I stream the German Grand Prix?

MotoGP has its own on-demand streaming service, offering live broadcast of practice, qualifying and the Sprint, as well as highlights. The MotoGP Video pass is available for an annual fee of 139.99 euros. Several local broadcasters also stream MotoGP races on their official websites.

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