All they did was win 🏆
The title race was a family affair within Ducati, as their incredible season peaked with Francesco Bagnaia and Jorge Martin’s ultimate showdown in Valencia 👑⚔️
#SeasonRecap | #MotoGP
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17 Grand Prix victories, 43 podiums, 16 Tissot Sprint wins, 17 pole positions, Riders and manufacturers champions. Ducati didn’t just break records in 2023, the Bologna Bullets smashed them! It’s fair to say 2023 will be remembered for Pecco Bagnaia defending his
Crown and Ducati taking MotoGP to new heights! But if we tell you how the team in red became trendsetters and record holders this year, we have to take you all the way back to the very start of
The season, so that means beginning where it all kicked off, 24th of March in Portimao! Pecco Bagnaia ready to kick off his title defence in fashion, sporting the number 1 plate, the first time anyone had done so since 2012 and the first time for Ducati since Casey Stoner in
2008. Early season buzz had new team-mate Enea Bastianini as possibly his closest challenger, with Prima Pramac Duo Jorge Martin and Johann Zarco looking to be consistent challengers for victory. Equipped with GP22 s, Valentino Rossi’s VR46 team were primed and ready to let loose their
Hotshots Luca Marini and Marco Bezzecchi and victory challengers in 2022 Gresini had Alex Marquez partner Fabio Di Giannantonio, in what was a star-studied Ducati line-up. 2023 couldn t have started better for reigning champion, Pecco Bagnaia. The Italian creating history by becoming the first-ever Tissot Sprint winner and
Then backing that up with a commanding win on Sunday in the main MotoGP race, becoming the first rider to win with the number 1 plate since Casey Stoner at the 2012 Australian GP. Leaving the Portuguese GP with 37 points, the trend look set for the season. That was until
Two races, two crashes and only sixteen points from a possible seventy-four. Were we starting to see a repeat of his 2022 early-season form? The champ quickly put any doubts to bed with a stunning late victory at Jerez after a difficult weekend up until that point. The
Italian struggling on Friday, finding form on Saturday and winning on Sunday would become a trait Pecco and his team would become famous for later in the season. Bagnaia once again found himself down and out again in Le Mans after a clash with Aprilia’s Maverick Viñales.
At this time there was another Italian VR46 Academy star starting to emerge as a title contender. Enter Marco Bezzecchi riding for the VR46 Team in his second MotoGP season, the Italian romped to his first-ever premier class victory in a wet Argentina. He then backed that
Up with a history-cementing performance at Le Mans, winning the 1000th GP. That same weekend another Ducati rider emerged as a race-winning contender. Jorge Martin was back to winning ways for the first time since 2021, in the Tissot Sprint. Proving that he still had the speed
To fight for victories, but could he channel that into consistent race-winning challenges? We didn t have to wait long to find out, another Sprint win 2 rounds later proved what many people thought in the off-season. The new Tissot Sprint format would suit Jorge Martin’s explosive speed
Perfectly, but that Sunday win still eluded him. Less than 24 hours later Martin was chasing his first weekend double and was embroiled in an intense back-and-forth battle with champion, Bagnaia, who himself had done the double again at the Italian GP, one week prior. Lap after lap,
The pair locked together passing and repassing and as Martin came around the final corner to start the last lap, the Ducati s made contact. Martin held off Bagnaia in an all-time classic performance that showed ‘The Martinator’ could go toe-to-toe with Pecco!
The midpoint of the season Pecco went on a tremendous run of form, two victories and a second in the races and a first and second in the Sprints followed over the next three rounds. The Italian was showing everyone why he was worthy of the number one.
But then it all came to a grinding halt. Bagnaia was down and everyone feared for the Italian. However, it quickly emerged that the outcome was much better than initially thought and Pecco walked out of hospital later that evening, aided by crutches after suffering a
Leg contusion in the incident. The Italian rocked up to Misano 5 days later still in discomfort but fought valiantly through the pain barrier for a double 3rd place-finish. The injury couldn’t have come at a worse time as Jorge Martin began to find momentum, another double victory in
Misano put Martin back into title contention, 38 points off Bagnaia. He had an air of self-belief; his blistering speed wasn’t a one-off in time attack mode. Martin backed this up with another dominant Sprint win in India and a 2nd place as Pecco began to stumble. Suffering
With braking stability issues on top of the injury, The Italian s strength had become a weakness and it showed as he crashed out of a safe 2nd place in India and handed Martin 20
Important points, the gap was now just 14 points. It wasn t just Martin that was back in contention, Bezzecchi found himself with an outside chance and those chances had got even bigger with a stunning
Indian GP victory. His first MotoGP race win since Le Mans and his first since the Dutch GP Tissot Sprint and just like he was there at Assen, Marco was celebrated like a rockstar. He wasn’t the only GP22 Ducati rider showing form, team-mate Luca Marini claimed his first MotoGP podium in COTA.
But he tangled with Bez in India, breaking his collarbone and putting himself out until Mandalika, where he bravely charged to 2nd in the Tissot Sprint and he wasn’t the only one walking wounded in the VR46 camp that weekend as Bezzecchi had broken his collarbone the week before at
Valentino Rossi s ranch, the Italian finished one place behind Marini in an exhibition of grit and determination within the Mooney VR46 team. But it was Jorge Martin that won his 4th straight Tissot Sprint and in doing so, took the MotoGP championship lead for the first time in
His career as Bagnaia could only finish 8th. Martin was looking hard to beat and the only person that looked able to stop ‘The Martinator’ would be Jorge himself. And that’s exactly what happened, Martin crashed from a comfortable 3-second lead,
Relinquishing the shortest-ever championship lead in MotoGP history to Pecco Bagnaia. The Italian romped to victory from 13th on the grid. Martin’s soft tyre choice in Australia backfired on the last lap as he slipped back to 5th after leading the entire race. Pecco finishing 2nd to extend his
Lead. To 27 points but the story of the day was about Martin’s teammate, Johann Zarco. The French rider had the most unwanted stat in motorsport. Most podiums without a victory, 19 but podium 20 was different, it was the Frenchman’s first MotoGP victory and that meant the backflip was back,
Not seen since his Moto2 swansong at Valencia in 2016. It was the perfect send-off to Pramac and Ducati as he was moving onto pastures new with LCR Honda in 2024. He wasn’t the last feel-good Ducati story of 2023, as Fabio Di Giannantonio, left without a MotoGP ride in 2024 had started to
Find his form in the premier class, finishing 3rd in Australia but his stock would skyrocket with a stunning victory in Qatar, proving the Italian was deserving of a place in MotoGP. In the end the popular Italian was rewarded with a seat at the VR46 team for 2024 with Marini moving
To Repsol Honda to try and emulate half-brother Valentino Rossi. Diggia s new-found form capped off a strong season for Gresini as Alex Marquez had already taken his first podium for the team in Argentina and then again, a 2nd place at Sepang but this was dwarfed by his two commanding Tissot
Sprint victories in Silverstone and Sepang. But the Sepang weekend belonged to Enea Bastinaini, The Beast had struggled with the GP23, and his progress was halted by in-season injury, which meant he missed a total of 7 rounds. But after trialling a new thumb brake in practice,
He found he could stop the bike better and this was a key factor in the Italian taking his first win since the 2022 Aragon GP. During that time the points gap swung back and forwards, a trend emerged as Martin would claw points back on Pecco in the
Sprints while Pecco would take points back in the race. There was a 21-point gap between the pair in the title decider. Martin got the upper hand in the Tissot Sprint, pulling the gap to 14 points but all Bagnaia needed was a 5th place to claim the title.
The tensions were high, everything was at stake and as lights went out it was Pecco and Marti leading the way, that was until Lap 3 Martin got sucked into Pecco’s slipstream and couldn’t stop the bike, narrowly avoided disaster but only several laps later it was all over after
Coming together with Marc Marquez. Pecco was champion and closed the season off with victory, becoming in the first Ducati rider in history to win back-to-back championships, the first Italian to do so since Valentino Rossi in 2009 and the first rider to win with the number 1 plate since
Mick Doohan in 1998. It was a remarkable year for MotoGP and Bagnaia, Martin put up a valiant fight all year and both were worthy champions. As 2023 closed its curtain, 2024 opened theirs and new faces appear the under the Bologna umbrella, 8-time champion Marc Marquez
Joins brother Alex at Gresini Ducati and Franco Morbidelli joins Pramac alongside Jorge Martin MotoGP in 2024 looks to be bigger and better than ever but can anyone stop Pecco Bagnaia from writing even more history as three-time MotoGP World Champion?
28 Comments
Champion
👍👍👍
DucatiGP
Record breaking for being allowed to cheat by the FIM? That’s not hard to accomplish, just have your bikes make up 1/3 of the field and threatens to leave if you’re not allowed to cheat. MotoGP has been decimated by Ducati and the FIM. The truth will come out and I can’t wait to see them both fall.
Ducati is here to stay!!
Go figure.. with 8 bikes on the grid, they could’ve called it the Ducati series. Next year gresini will be first independant to win title
Dorna should convince more teams to join like Kawasaki and BMW, and give each team one satellite team. This will be fair enough.
For God sake pls remove this man behind the video,
Francesco❤
I'm not a Ducati fan but…
When you Japanese bike weebs will ever stop crying about MotoGP being "DucatiGP"?!
Also, can I ask this question? Way back from 1974 to 2019 this sport was known as "MotoNippon" and did anyone ever cried about those Japanese bikes' dominance? Did Ducati and all other non-Japanese manufacturers complaining about them? Did the community ever complaining about the MotoGP was boring?
For those people who keep crying about "DucatiGP" and any other unfunny insults towards Ducati, this video is for you:
https://youtu.be/OLpeX4RRo28?si=OFS4h-Je2scXjTAB
Basta lagi pisot maayo jud 👍
man ducati is the boss for sure
Not just motoGP actually.
They dominated any category they raced on
Get another narrator 😂
MOTOGP ❤
Great video, damn that’s a thick accent
This may seem dumb to a lot of people but why is it the Italian bikes Ducati & Aprilia etc have 1098/1100/1200 and the jap bikes or bmw are 1000cc’s ?
Marc will be champ again. Go 93 🔥
Always watching from Georgetown Guyana south America 🇬🇾🇬🇾
Perfect Ducati ❤
Perfect Pecco 🤩
Back tree back pecco bagnaya 2024 the best Ducati raider…..
2023 season is DucatiGP, 8 bikes is just too much advantage to other manufactures
8 BIKE 🤣🤣🤣🤣
I have a feeling Marquez is going to tie Valentino with 9 next year…yeah I'd bet money on that.
Really hoping Frankie does well next year. It's pretty much his last chance. Also hope DiGi continues his end of season form. VR46 came close to winning team of the year. A bit more consistency from both riders near the front and it's definitely doable next year. Also want to see Bez compete for the championship.
Ducati cup 2023 = 🤮🤮🤮😴😴
ADI