Marco Bezzecchi earned pole position during MotoGP World Championship qualifying on Saturday at Pertamina Mandalika Circuit, in Indonesia. Riding his Aprilia Racing RS-GP25, the Italian broke Jorge Martin’s 2024 All-Time Lap Record of 1:29.088 with a time of 1:28.832 around the 2.7-mile (4.30 km) circuit during Qualifying Two (Q2) on Saturday.
Fermin Aldeguer was the best of the rest with a 1:29.230 on his BK8 Gresini Racing Ducati Desmosedici GP24, and Raul Fernandez claimed the third and final spot on the front row with a 1:29.284 on his Trackhouse Team Aprilia RS-GP25.
Row-two qualifiers included Monster Energy Yamaha’s Alex Rins (1:29.336), Red Bull KTM Factory’s Pedro Acosta (1:29.343) and Honda HRC Castrol’s Luca Marini (1:29.513).
Teammates, Marc Marquez was 9th with a time of 1:29.773 and Francesco Bagnaia got 16th with a lap time of 1:29.996 on their Lenovo Team Ducati Desmosedici GP25.
QualifyingResults motpgp
More, from a press release issued by Dorna:
Bezzecchi blasts to pole with jumbled up grid in Indonesia. A 1:28.832 is a new lap record by the in-form Aprilia rider, whilst newly-crowned World Champion Marc Marquez goes from the third row.
One of the most shaken-up grids of the year is headed by polesitter Marco Bezzecchi (Aprilia Racing) as the #72’s form of recent rounds continues with domination at Mandalika. He heads up an exciting front row, including rookie Fermin Aldeguer (BK8 Gresini Racing MotoGP) and Raul Fernandez (Trackhouse MotoGP Team), whilst Marc Marquez (Ducati Lenovo Team) suffered his worst qualifying of 2025 in P9.
Q1: headlines acts with a first hurdle
With both Marquez and teammate Francesco Bagnaia (Ducati Lenovo Team) contesting Q1, it was always going to be a battle for graduation. Marquez led Fabio Di Giannantonio (Pertamina Enduro VR46 Racing Team) in the provisional graduation spots after the first run, with Pecco P7, the Japanese GP winner with work to do. Lapping together, ‘Diggia’ and teammate Franco Morbidelli (Pertamina Enduro VR46 Racing Team) managed to improve their times with the #21 briefly into Q2 before Di Giannantonio snatched P1, demoting the #93 to P2 but at the chequered flag, he was safe. Di Giannantonio and Marquez moved into Q2, Morbidelli missing out by 0.048s. Bagnaia was only sixth, leaving him 16th on the grid.
Pole battle: Bezzecchi unstoppable, Marc Marquez struggling
With Q2 underway, all eyes turned to the pole battle and the pre-session favourite Marco Bezzecchi, who was fastest on Friday and in FP2 on Saturday. He delivered the goods and by the end of the first run was the rider to beat, but there was still time for it all to change. Further down the order, Fabio Quartararo (Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP) suffered a fast crash at Turn 15 but was straight back on his feet and onto his second bike.
Going into the final run, Marc Marquez needed a lap and was down in P10 with less than three minutes remaining. Pedro Acosta (Red Bull KTM Factory Racing) and Fernandez were on the provisional front row, but Bezzecchi was in a different league up ahead, smashing the all-time lap record and becoming the first rider into the 1’28s at Mandalika. Just behind, Alex Rins (Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP) had put in a cracking lap to go third, whilst elsewhere, Alex Marquez (BK8 Gresini Racing MotoGP) fell at Turn 13.
A new order: ‘Simply the Bez’ at Mandalika
Nobody could catch Bezzecchi, who stormed to pole position, a second in three GPs and with a margin of 0.398s. In second place, a first front row in MotoGP for Aldeguer, following Bezzecchi home just like on Friday afternoon. Fernandez recovered his front row starting position from Rins, a first front row for him since he was third at the Sachsenring in 2024. Rins crashed on his final flying lap but with a best qualifying since COTA in 2023, he may have a say at the front. Acosta and Luca Marini (Honda HRC Castrol) round out the second row of the grid with all five manufacturers across the front two rows.
World champions struggle: Marc Marquez, Quartararo and Mir downfield
Despite a late fall that cost him a second row grid slot, Alex Marquez took the chequered flag for P7, ahead of Quartararo and Marc Marquez. It was the #93’s worst qualifying of the season and he’ll have to battle through the likes of ‘El Diablo’ and his brother before thinking about a podium. A first top ten since Aragon last year for Miguel Oliveira (Prima Pramac Yamaha MotoGP) with three Yamahas inside the top ten, ahead of Di Giannantonio and Motegi podium finisher Joan Mir (Honda HRC Castrol).
MotoGP qualifying results from Mandalika!