The 2025 Aragon Motogp Grand Prix

The 2025 Aragon Grand Prix was a powerhouse weekend across all classes — here’s a breakdown of MotoGP, Moto2, and Moto3 results, followed by detailed analysis and video highlights.
MotoGP
Free Practice 3 & Tissot Sprint
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FP3: Marc Márquez continued his dominance by topping all sessions, including FP3, maintaining perfect pace .
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Sprint Race:
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Marc Márquez (Ducati Lenovo) – Mastered a challenging start with a wheelspin, then surged to the lead by lap 6 and controlled the race
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Álex Márquez (Gresini Ducati) – Held strong in P2, but chose not to challenge his brother's pace
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Fermín Aldeguer (Gresini Ducati) – Climbed from 7th to take the final podium spot
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This was Marc’s seventh straight sprint win in 2025, underlining his complete control at MotorLand .
Moto2
Main Race Highlights
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Diogo Moreira narrowly claimed his victory by just 0.003s over Deniz Öncü — a razor-thin finish.
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Barry Baltus secured P3, with Senna Agius in 4th
This result reshuffles the standings and tightens the midfield battles.
Moto3
Main Race Highlights
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José Antonio Rueda continued his strong form with another win, extending his championship advantage He was followed by David Muñoz and David Almansa, completing an all-Spanish podium.
Detailed Analysis
MotoGP
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Complete dominance by Marc Márquez—extending his lead to 32 points with a flawless weekend that included pole, sprint, and feature race wins
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Sibling showcase: Álex Márquez continued his strong form but opted for a strategic 1–2 finish over sibling rivalry .
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Ducati stronghold: Aldeguer's podium adds to Ducati's consistent presence at the front.
Moto2
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Classic duel: Moreira and Öncü edged out the competition in a thrilling finale
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Championship shake-up: With González off the top, expect tighter point gaps and more aggressive mid-season battles ahead.
Moto3
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Rueda’s supremacy: Yet another win, reinforcing his dominance in the lightweight class .
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Spanish sweep: Muñoz and Almansa’s podiums signal a shift toward a national championship battle.
Championship Implications
Category | Leader | Key Takeaways |
---|---|---|
MotoGP | Marc Márquez | Consolidated championship lead; unbeatable at springs & main |
Moto2 | Battle heating up | Moreira and Öncü close in; González’s fall was pivotal |
Moto3 | José A. Rueda | Reinforcing early lead; Spanish talent surge |
MotoGP – Main Race (MotorLand Aragón)
Top 10 Finishers:
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Marc Márquez (Ducati Lenovo)
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Álex Márquez (BK8 Gresini Ducati) – +1.107 s
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Francesco Bagnaia (Ducati Lenovo) – +2.029 s
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Pedro Acosta (Red Bull KTM RC16) – +7.657 s
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Franco Morbidelli (Pertamina VR46 Ducati) – +10.363 s
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Fermín Aldeguer (Gresini Ducati rookie) – +11.889 s
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Joan Mir (Honda HRC) – +14.938 s
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Marco Bezzecchi (Aprilia Racing)
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Fabio Di Giannantonio (VR46 Ducati)
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Raúl Fernández (Trackhouse Racing)
Analysis:
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Marc achieved a perfect weekend—pole, sprint, and main race victory—putting him firmly in championship territory
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Álex continued his strong season, finishing as runner-up in a strategic Ducati 1–2.
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Bagnaia’s podium salvaged vital points amid a Ducati podium lockout.
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Acosta's 4th place marks a significant step forward for KTM.
Moto2 – Main Race
Top 10 Finishers:
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Deniz Öncü (Kalex, Red Bull KTM Ajo) – First-ever Moto2 win
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Diogo Moreira (Kalex, Italtrans) – +0.003 s
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Barry Baltus (Kalex, Fantic)
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Senna Agius (Kalex, Liqui Moly Intact)
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Filip Salac
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Arón Canet
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Manuel González (P3 originally but later off podium in some reports; he led the championship)
8–10. Include riders like Holgado and others as per full results
Analysis:
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Öncü snagged his first victory by a heart-stopping 0.003 seconds—the closest Moto2 finish ever
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Moreira and Baltus continue their dual podium consistency.
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González remains the championship leader despite not winning.
Moto3 – Main Race
Top 10 Finishers:
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David Muñoz (KTM, Liqui Moly Intact)
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Máximo Quiles (KTM) – +0.050 s
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Álvaro Carpe (KTM) – +0.381 s
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David Almansa (Honda)
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Luca Lunetta
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Ángel Piqueras
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Joel Kelso
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José Antonio Rueda
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Ryusei Yamanaka
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Cormac Buchanan
Analysis:
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Muñoz celebrated his first-ever Moto3 win, dedicating it to the late Hugo Millán—an emotional and strategic victory won on hard tires
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Quiles impressively held second, repeating a Silverstone-level late charge.
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Carpe sealed the podium, breaking a KTM dominance with a Yamaha standout in fourth.
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